This is an action of tort, tried to a jury, to recover for the loss of sight in the right eye of the minor plaintiff and for the father’s consequent loss and expense. The judge in the Superior Court directed a verdict for the defendant on all the counts of the declaration. There was no error.
Taken most favorably for the plaintiffs the evidence shows facts as follows: At some time in the morning of April 24, 1950, the defendant’s employee made his daily delivery of a case of milk to the Bradstreet Primary Grade School building in Gloucester by depositing it in the front vestibule with five or six pounds of ice on top of it “to ice the milk down” and without a cover thereon. He had made such deliveries from the early fall of 1949. He knew that children played *370 in. the schoolyard and that they frequently had to pass by the milk and ice in the vestibule. Photographs in evidence show a small wooden schoolhouse with a shed-like vestibule immediately adjacent to the play yard and raised two steps above it, and that the vestibule encloses a shallow floor area with spaces either side of the entrance door slightly less in width than the width of the door. The employee had never seen the children playing with ice. He would come back each day at around 4 p.m. to pick up the empty case. The school children often played in the yard after school was out “sometimes . . . with the ice or played games,” and on many occasions would pick up ice from the case, throw it around, and smash it to reduce to smaller size pieces which were too big to suck. On various occasions prior to April 24 pieces of ice had been “scattered around the playground area.” About 4 p.m. on April 24 the minor plaintiff, then seven and one half years old, was seated on steps in the schoolyard when a playmate, nine years old, threw a piece of ice on the ground in order to break it. One of the resulting fragments struck the right eye of the minor plaintiff, cutting the cornea.
On these facts there is no basis for finding a lack of that “high degree of care” which the “expected presence of school children required.”
Clouatre
v.
Lees,
As there is in our view no basis for a finding of negligence we do not reach the question of the significance of the foreseeability of the particular accident. Compare
Glassey
v.
Worcester Consolidated Street Railway,
*372
The allegations of a nuisance add nothing to the plaintiffs’ case.
Samuel
v.
White Fuel Corp.
No error is shown in the exclusion of evidence.
Exceptions overruled.
