184 Mass. 204 | Mass. | 1903
The plaintiff’s intestate was run over and dragged along the ground for some distance by one of the defendant’s street cars on September 12,1900, and was dead when picked up. The action was for negligently causing his death. The motorman of the car and three passengers testified that the deceased was lying on the track between the rails when first seen by them and that he lay motionless until struck and dragged by the car, almost instantly after he first became visible to them, and there was no evidence to contradict this testimony.
The highway was fifty-five feet wide, with the car track within its limits and south of its centre line. North of the centre line was a macadam driveway twenty-six feet wide. At the place where the deceased was struck a pathway made smooth by the use of foot travellers and bicyclists ran along between the rails of the car track. According to the testimony of the witnesses who testified that they were in the first wagon the deceased when seen by them was walking next to the inside rail of a curve and on the outside of the rail next the highway. The bicyclist testified that the deceased was walking outside of the rails when he first saw him and that the deceased stepped between the rails to get out of the way of the bicycle. The witness who testified that he was riding in the second wagon testified that the deceased was walking between the rails. The night was cloudy with a strong wind which blew in the direction opposite to that in which the car was moving, and which made a great noise in the trees.
Neither of the witnesses who testified to meeting the deceased walking saw anything of the accident or knew until the next day that an accident happened. The plaintiff admits that when the deceased was met by the first wagon the car was more than
Unless it was competent for the jury to find from the evidence that the deceased did for his own safety what ordinarily careful persons are accustomed to do under like circumstances the verdict for the defendant was ordered rightly, because of the plaintiff’s failure to show that his intestate was in the exercise of due care.
Assuming that the jury might find, against the testimony of the four witnesses who swore that they saw the deceased lying on the track between the rails, that he was walking between the rails to avoid a wagon approaching him in front, and that when the wagon passed him the car was approaching him from behind and was only twenty or thirty feet distant, under such circumstances an ordinarily careful person would step off the track and out of the way of the car, as the witness who testified that he saw the deceased in such circumstances testified that he expected him to do.
There was no testimony ■ that the deceased was so walking when struck by the car, and even if it could be so inferred, no reason consistent with his due care for his continuance upon the track could be drawn except by conjecture. In our opinion there was no sufficient evidence to justify the submission of the case to a jury. See Hillyer v. Dickinson, 154 Mass. 502; Brooks v. Old Colony Railroad, 168 Mass. 164.
.Exceptions overruled.