282 Mass. 280 | Mass. | 1933
These are two actions of tort to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on a public
The facts in their aspect most favorable to the plaintiff in substance disclose that the accident to the plaintiff occurred on March 14, 1931; that at that time the plaintiff was a common laborer employed by the Dewey and Almy Chemical Company; that the defendant Margaret H. Hillery was in the trucking business and as such had business connections with the said chemical company; that she was the owner of the truck involved in each of the actions; and that the defendant John Doyle was working for her, and as her agent was driving the truck at the date and at the time of the accident to the plaintiff. The evidence so considered warranted the finding that the plaintiff was ordered by the forepaan of the chemical company to load the truck of the defendant, driven by the defendant Doyle, with rubbish and dump at a place off Concord Avenue in North Cambridge; that the plaintiff with other employees of the chemical company unloaded the truck at the designated place; that the plaintiff had been to the “dump” several times before on the same truck with the same driver; that the surface of the “dump” was higher than the surface of the street; that there was a drop from the “dump” to the surface of the street of about eight inches; that the plaintiff knew that when the truck came out from the “dump” it had to drop off the bank on to the surface of Concord Avenue; that when the truck arrived at the “dump” it was “Pulled in on the road and turned
On the above statement it is plain that the jury would not be warranted in finding what the speed of the truck was as it traversed the distance of five feet between the front of the truck and the edge of the drop at the avenue; and equally plain that the jury could not determine on the evidence shown whether a “short sharp turn” was proper or even necessary in the conditions “when the wheel dropped” and the truck “careened and tipped.” It is admitted that the plaintiff “knew that when the truck came out from the dump it had to drop off that bank on to the surface of Concord Avenue.” In these circumstances there was no duty on the driver to warn the plaintiff that the truck was about to start or would be expected to tip when it was turned to cross the drop to the avenue. Manifestly the facts do not warrant a finding that the driver was negligent either in not warning the plaintiff that the truck was to be started at once or that a depression' in the way was to be traversed with a probable tipping and severe jolting of the truck.
The plaintiff, in support of his right to maintain his action, relies upon the further position that “The operation of an unregistered automobile on the highways ... is unlawful, creates a nuisance thereon and makes the driver and assenting owner liable for all the direct injury resulting from such act, although such injury was not the result of an act of negligence.” The defendant according to our understanding does not dispute that such is the law if the
In each action the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.