310 Mass. 475 | Mass. | 1941
These are two actions of tort, the first being brought to recover for personal injuries, and the second for consequential damages. The cases were tried to a jury and at the close of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict in his favor in each case. The motions were denied subject to the defendant’s exceptions, and the jury returned a verdict in each case for the plaintiff.
The evidence in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiffs would warrant the jury in finding the following facts: Rose Gagnon, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff, was living with her husband at 41 Vine Street in Milford, in this Commonwealth, at the time of the accident. Vine Street runs north and south and the plaintiff’s house faced westerly on that street.
On January 13, 1939, the defendant, a baker, who had been delivering bread to the plaintiff for about a year, drove his truck, a "panel job,” which was headed north, and stopped with the right side of the truck close to a fence in front of the plaintiff’s house. He stopped “closer than usual” to the fence. When the plaintiff saw the defendant she put her coat over her shoulders buttoning it by a single button at the neck. She "did not put her arms in the sleeves.” She went around the back of the truck and by its left side to the driver’s seat. "She had been to the left side on other occasions.” The defendant remained in the truck. The plaintiff told him what she needed, and he said that he was late that morning and that he was in a little hurry and asked her if “she ‘could make it a little faster’ and she said that she would.” “As a rule . . . [the plaintiff] paid him about once a week and he marked the bread in his book.” He handed her a loaf of bread. She
“In determining whether the defendant was negligent, his conduct is to be judged by whether a reasonable man, knowing as much of the circumstances surrounding the defendant at the time as the defendant knew or should have known, would have realized that his conduct, at that time, involved an unreasonable risk of harm to others.” Galliher v. Stewart, ante, 77, 80, and cases cited. In the light of this rule we are of opinion that the jury could not find properly that in all the circumstances the defendant should have realized that, in starting away while the plaintiff was proceeding to return to her home and was passing the left
The defendant’s motion in each case for a directed verdict should have been granted. Accordingly, in each case the entry will be
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.