204 Mass. 340 | Mass. | 1910
It is sufficiently manifest upon reading this bill of exceptions and looking at the photographs which are referred to therein that this accident occurred at a very dangerous crossing. The place was perfectly familiar to the plaintiff; he had driven his horse over the defendant’s tracks into and out of Clinton’s yard a great number of times, and was well aware of the danger that existed. It was his duty in coming out to and upon the defendant’s tracks on this occasion, to use his senses actively for his own protection. The due cafe which one is bound to exercise varies with the existing circumstances of each particular case. Cayzer v. Taylor, 10 Gray, 274. Cunningham v. Hall, 4 Allen, 268. Gardner v. Boston Elevated Railway, ante, 213. The circumstances here called for a high degree of care.
The plaintiff was sixty-two years of age, but his eyesight and hearing were good. The point at which he started to come out from the yard of the Clinton house was distant one hundred and fourteen feet from the street. The defendant’s track was distant sixteen and four tenths feet from the street
On direct examination he did not say that he listened for a car while approaching the street, but did say that he heard no noise of any approaching car. On cross-examination he testified that he made no special effort, on account of the noise his own team was making, to hear other noises. Further cross-examinatian was as follows: “ Q. Now, you did realize of course that tracks of a street railway company are to be gone over with some care and precaution to avoid accidents, did you? A. I did.—Q. You realized that? A. Yes. — Q. You realized or didn’t you realize that you were going from a place of safety in that yard out in to a place of danger ? A. Not at that time I did not realize; I realized it afterwards. — Q. Why did you not realize it at the time? A. Because I suppose I should have heard the car, the ringing of bells, or the gong, or something of that kind. In fact I gave it no thought. — Q. Now, did you listen for anything of the kind? A. No, I do not think I did. — Q. Will you say, sir, that the gong of that car was not ringing ? A. I will. — Q. But you did not listen particularly to hear whether it was or not? A. Not particularly; no, sir.— Q. Do you remember what you were thinking about ? A. No, I do not remember. I was thinking about getting back to my place of business. — Q. If the gong of that car was ringing can
The bill of exceptions further states that it was the plaintiff’s “ recollection and belief that it was impossible for anybody driving out of that yard on to the track to have seen a car at a greater distance than twenty or thirty feet away, until the horse was on the track. He knew that it was slightly down grade from the direction of Weymouth for some distance, and that cars were in the habit of coasting down there; that there are not many houses about there; that there was a straight track for a long distance on either side of that driveway.”
We- find no other testimony in the exceptions that tends to vary or to explain these statements of the plaintiff.
On this evidence we cannot avoid the conclusion that the plaintiff failed to take any sufficient care for his own safety. This affirmatively appears from his own testimony. Approaching what he knew to be a dangerous crossing, he did not listen for a car; he did not look for one coming from the right except in a manner which he knew to be wholly inefficacious. It is true of course that there is no absolute rule of law requiring a
The cases cited by counsel for the plaintiff do not help him. In most of them there was evidence either that the person injured looked or listened for a car when that might avail him, or that he was run into from behind when he might reasonably have expected the motorman to avoid doing so. Robbins v. Dartmouth & Westport Street Railway, 203 Mass. 546, decided since this case was argued, turned on the fact that a traveller in the street could not be held to anticipate that a car would be run at the rate of forty miles an hour in a busy city street.
The case has been fully tried, and it is manifest that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain his action. The first instruction requested by the defendant should have been given. Under the provisions of St. 1909, c. 236, not only must the exceptions be sustained, but the defendant is entitled to have judgment entered in its favor; and it is
So ordered.