The plaintiffs took exceptions to that part of the charge which instructed that inferences might be drawn from the failure of the plaintiffs to call certain witnesses, and to a refusal of an instruction on the subject.
The plaintiff Walter J. Grady, Junior, twenty-six years of age, was injured on November 18, 1946, about midnight, when the automobile which he was operating, owned by his mother, May V. Grady, the other plaintiff, was in collision with the defendant’s truck on Route 122 in Northbridge. Walter (hereinafter, the plaintiff) testified that “four other boys,” whom he named, “were in the car . . . one of them ... in the front seat with . . . [him].” He saw them at the hospital in Whitinsville that night following the accident and he believed he discussed with them how the accident happened; he had not seen any of the four lately; he had given their names to his counsel; he did not know whether any effort had been made to see any of them lately; “all . . . four boys lived in Worcester”; “as far as I know” they “still do.” The trial was held in September, 1955.
The plaintiff’s testimony was that the truck was being driven around a curve partly on his side of the road. The defendant’s driver testified that he was on his own side of the road; the Grady car came directly at him, and, although he pulled over into the bank beside the road, Grady skinned along and hit the trailer. A police officer testified that after the accident Grady said that he was coming from a dance in Uxbridge and had no idea how fast he was going around the curve; he guessed he was going too fast to make *504 the curve which he did not know was there as he was not acquainted with the road; when he came around the curve he thought he was going to hit a telephone pole “so he pulled his car hack to the left hand side of the road.” A second officer corroborated this testimony.
The refused request read: “ [N]o inference is to be drawn against the plaintiff for failing to bring in any of the passengers who were riding in the auto operated by the plaintiff, because the defendant has a right to produce them, if he so desires.” The judge, in substance, charged that the obligation is on a party to produce witnesses in his control if it is reasonable to expect they would be helpful to him, but if not within his control, they are witnesses available to either side; the evidence showed that the plaintiff has not produced as witnesses guests in his car; he knows who they are; there is no evidence the defendant knows their names, or their availability; the defendant had a right to say to the plaintiff “produce those witnesses,” otherwise, on the failure to produce them, the jury may draw any inference they wish which may be unfavorable to the plaintiff; after the accident one or more of the witnesses talked over with the plaintiff how it happened; “those witnesses, it appears, live in Worcester”; their names were turned over to counsel for the plaintiff; the jury have not heard their testimony which “may or may not help you”; there has been no explanation as to why the witnesses have not been brought in, “whether they’re sick or can’t come to court”; “you are warranted in drawing the inference [that] if these witnesses were here, they wouldn’t help the plaintiff . . . simply that you are warranted in drawing that inference, not that you should.”
The applicable rule includes the requirement that if an inference against a party is based on the absence of a possible witness it must appear that the witness is in the control of the party and available.
Commonwealth
v.
McCabe,
The scope of the rule of availability is indicated in the review of earlier cases in
Commonwealth
v.
Domanski,
Within the limits of the rule the trial judge may allow the inference to be drawn if the evidence shows the probable availability to the party of the absent witnesses, the circumstances emphatically call for their presence if his testimony is to be believed, and no explanation has been offered of their absence.
Commonwealth
v.
O’Rourke,
In the O ’Rourke case it was ruled that an inference could be drawn from the failure to call any of many persons whose names appeared on allegedly false nomination papers. The district attorney had already called five persons who had testified that their names on the paper had not been written by them. “So many names . . . were on the papers that if they were genuine it would seem an easy matter to call in a few of the signers. ... We cannot say as a matter of law that this omission [to call any of them] was wholly without significance” (p. 223). “It is frequently held that where a witness is equally available to either party no inference can be drawn against either for not calling him. . . . But there is no hard and fast rule to that effect. Whether an inference can be drawn from the failure to call witnesses necessarily depends, as with inferences generally, upon the posture of the particular case and the state of the evidence” (p. 222).
*507
The earlier decisions in criminal cases, a number of which are cited in the
Domanski
case,
supra,
although they must be read in the light of the recent restatements of the rule, retain significance in showing that the probability of availability may be enough where the occasion for calling the witnesses, or explaining their absence, is sufficiently strong.
Commonwealth
v.
McCabe,
In
Commonwealth v. Spencer,
*508
In noncriminal cases also, where the spur to corroboration was deemed strong, the inference has been allowed based on probable availability.
Attorney Gen.
v.
Pelletier,
The earlier accident cases do not establish a requirement that immediate availability must always be shown.
Fitzpatrick
v.
Boston Elev. Ry.
Some cases rule only that it was not error to refuse to permit comment on the failure to call a witness.
McGeorge
v.
Grand Realty Trust, Inc.
In the leading case of
McKim
v.
Foley,
*509
In none of the cases which exemplify the requirement of actual availability did the circumstances emphatically call for the presence of the witness at the call of the party or an explanation of the absence. In two of them the absent witness was a physician, well understood to be often unavailable.
Heina
v.
Broadway Fruit Mkt. Inc.
In the present cases, on the other hand, the circumstances strongly supported the adverse inference. The plaintiff’s testimony was uncorroborated and was opposed by that of three witnesses, which, if accepted, showed his admitted fault to be the cause of the accident. The names of the plaintiff’s companions had been given to his counsel. There was very substantial likelihood that, notwithstanding the nine year interval, one or more of them lived in Worcester or near by. That there were four witnesses equally called for is important. See
Commonwealth
v.
McCabe,
Certain factual statements in the charge were not precise. It was not correct to say that the defendant at the trial did not know the witnesses’ names. The significant thing, however, was that it appeared that the defendant knew the names of the witnesses only from the testimony of the plaintiff at the trial and hence had not had equal *510 opportunity to call them. It was not an established fact, but at best only an inference, that the witnesses “live in Worcester,” but the categorical statement was not prejudicial, for all the witnesses still lived in Worcester so far as the plaintiff knew, and the inference was equally strong which arose on the failure of the plaintiff either to call any of them or to explain their absence.
We reiterate that even where, as here, the issue lies in the discretion of the judge, caution should be exercised in permitting the adverse inference. In these cases, however, it was plainly reasonable to conclude that a plaintiff who wished to have the jury believe that the truck driver and two policemen in denying his testimony were mistaken, or lying, would either have called his four companions or explained why he did not do so, and it was well within the discretion of the trial judge to let the inference be drawn.
Exceptions overruled.
