281 Mass. 166 | Mass. | 1932
The defendant was driving his automobile in an easterly direction on East Worcester Street, in the city of Worcester, within two feet of such motor vehicles as were parked along the curb at his right. He knew the street very well and the general character of the locality. Immediately after passing East Worcester Place, which intersected at his right the street on which he was travelling, and shortly before he came opposite Cross Street which intersected it at his left, the right front part of his automobile collided with the plaintiff who was crossing East Worcester Street in a northerly direction. As he approached, the defendant saw half a dozen children playing in the street one or two hundred feet east of the scene of the accident. Opposite the point where the collision occurred there was a truck belonging to the plaintiff’s father parked in front of his store at the defendant’s right.
The foregoing facts were not in dispute. On conflicting evidence the jury was warranted in finding as facts what here follows. The plaintiff, who was about eight years and one month old, when on the sidewalk beside the parked truck, looked and saw the defendant’s automobile approaching at a distance which he testified was four hundred feet; he also looked in the opposite direction and proceeded on the sidewalk to the front of the truck with the intention of
The argument of the defendant was mainly in support of his contention that because of the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff a verdict for the defendant should have been directed. In all of the cases cited on his brief by the defendant save one, the person for whose injury or death recovery was sought was an adult. In that one case (Sullivan v. Chadwick, 236 Mass. 130), the plaintiff was three years and nine months old and it was held he was too young and immature to be trusted alone on the street where he was struck, that his parents were negligent in allowing him to be there unattended and that therefore recovery could be had only if he exercised the care required of ordinarily prudent adult persons under the same circumstances. Manifestly that is not the standard set by the law for this plaintiff in the matter of using care. Milbury v. Turner Centre System, 274 Mass. 358, 363. He was of an age to be rightfully on the street unattended (see Jean v. Nester, 261 Mass. 442, Burns v. F. Knight & Son Corp. 213 Mass.
Exceptions overruled.