214 Mass. 61 | Mass. | 1913
This is an action of tort to recover compensation for personal injuries received by a traveller on the highway through collision with a car of the defendant. On a bright dry day the plaintiff was driving a heavy, quiet horse hitched in a platform wagon with a load weighing from thirty-five hundred to forty-five hundred pounds, the total length of the wagon and horse being twenty-two to twenty-five feet, easterly along the right side of Summer Street, intending to turn to his left northerly on to Dorchester Avenue, which crossed Summer Street nearly at a right angle. In Summer Street there were two tracks of the defendant, from which two tracks diverged southerly into Dorchester Avenue. These two streets were in a busy part of Boston. The testimony as to the course of the plaintiff was conflicting, but there was evidence to the effect that as he approached the junction of the two streets he looked to the right on Dorchester Avenue for cars and wagons coming in that direction, and, finding that he could turn without danger from that source, he crossed these tracks and turned around the centre of the two streets, and then looked back on Summer Street in the direction from which he had come, and up Summer Street where he saw a covered wagon crossing the tracks
It has been said often to be the general rule that collisions at intersecting streets between trolley cars and horse-drawn vehicles present questions of fact as to the due care and the negligence of the one in charge of each. Halloran v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 192 Mass. 104. Doherty v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 207 Mass. 27. Farris v. Boston Elevated Railway, 210 Mass. 585. It cannot be pronounced a lack of due care for the driver of a slowly moving trucking wagon to start across a double track of a street railway in a crowded district where no car is visible on the farther track for a distance of two hundred and fifty or three hundred feet. He may rely to some extent on the motorman exercising precaution to avoid collision. Jeddrey v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 198 Mass. 232. LeBaron v. Old Colony Street Railway, 197 Mass. 289. The physical facts are not so clear as to negative the estimate of distance given by the plaintiff, or to show that a car was in truth within his vision at the -time when, according to his testimony, tio car was in sight.. The case is distinguishable in its facts from Cokinos v. Boston Elevated Railway, 209 Mass. 225, Tognazzi v. Milford & Uxbridge Street Railway, 201 Mass. 7, and other similar cases relied on by the defendant.
The negligence of the motorman under these circumstances was also for the jury. If his view of the plaintiff’s horse and wagon on its way across the tracks was within his vision for two hundred and fifty feet, it might have been found that he could have avoided the collision. Carrahar v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 198 Mass. 549. Hatch v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 205 Mass. 410.
The judge of the Superior Court (against the objection of the plaintiff, who contended that he had no right so to do) inserted in
In accordance with the terms of the report, judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,500.
So ordered.