300 Mass. 365 | Mass. | 1938
The plaintiff, on February 25, 1933, parked his automobile on the right hand side of Boylston Street in Boston, near Clarendon Street, with its front towards Boston Common. After looking to see whether any vehicle was approaching from the rear and seeing none, he got out by the door on the left side, which was away from the curb. Almost at once he was knocked down. Witnesses testified that what struck him was an automobile going towards Boston Common and driven by a man of about forty years. The case is here, after a finding of the judge for the plaintiff, upon exceptions taken by the defendant. His only contention is that there was no sufficient evidence that he operated or owned the automobile that struck the plaintiff. If the defendant was the registered, owner, his ownership was evidence that he was responsible for the manner of its operation. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 85A. If there was such evidence, the auditor’s finding that the automobile that struck the plaintiff was not the defendant’s ceased to have any controlling legal force, and the question became one for the tribunal of fact on all the evidence. Wyman v. Whicher, 179 Mass. 276, 277. Ballou v. Fitzpatrick, 283 Mass. 336. Kramer v. Massachusetts Gas & Electric Light Supply Co. 298 Mass. 457.
We think there was- evidence that the defendant was the registered owner, if not the operator, of the automobile that struck the plaintiff, (a) An eye-witness testified that the defendant’s automobile resembled the one in question, and that the defendant looked “70 per cent . . . but not 100 per cent” like the man whom he saw in it. (b) The auditor found that one Bean saw the accident and wrote down in good faith the registration number of the automobile in question as 671,507, which was the registration number of the defendant’s automobile. That finding remained evidence in the case, notwithstanding the auditor’s general finding that Bean was mistaken, and that the automobile in question was not the defendant’s, (c) There was evidence
Exceptions overruled.