240 Mass. 170 | Mass. | 1921
This is an action of tort for personal injuries. The plaintiff testified that in the latter part of August, 1916, she was struck in the back by a baseball; that for a considerable period of time before and after the injury she had been employed by the defendant; that the accident occurred during the noon hour and while she.was on Weaver Street, an "ordinary street” in Fall River, returning to the mill where she worked; that the defendant operated three cotton mills employing several thousand men; that at the time she was struck some of these men were playing baseball on a lot of the defendant about twenty-five or thirty feet from the street and adjacent thereto; that she had seen them there every day, in summer, while she worked there. On cross-examination she testified that she was accustomed to take a walk during the noon hour and almost every day passed the lot where the boys were playing; that girls gathered there to watch the play; that while she was employed at the mill she had
The due care of the plaintiff is not in issue. The only question is whether a finding of negligence on the part of the defendant would have been warranted.
It is plain upon the facts as disclosed by the record that for the defendant to allow its employees during the noon hour to engage in games of ball for pleasure and recreation on a large vacant field owned by it could not be found to constitute a nuisance.
If we assume without deciding that Weaver Street, which is described as an “ordinary street,” was a public highway, the defendant would be liable if, by acts negligently permitted or authorized by it on its land the plaintiff was injured while she was lawfully on the highway; and she would not lose her rights as a traveller if she stopped for a minute to speak to other persons. Judd v. Fargo, 107 Mass. 264. Smethurst v. Barton Square Independent Congregational Church, 148 Mass. 261, 266. Commonwealth v. Henry, 229 Mass. 19, 22.
Cases which hold that the owner of land abutting on a highway may be liable to a person lawfully thereon for injuries caused from objects falling from the premises are not applicable to the facts in the case at bar. Shipley v. Fifty Associates, 106 Mass. 194. Gray v. Boston Gas Light Co. 114 Mass. 149. Gorham v. Gross, 125 Mass. 232. Smethurst v. Barton Square Independent Congregational Church, supra. Woodman v. Shepard, 238 Mass. 196.
As the persons playing ball at the time the plaintiff was injured were not so engaged during the hours of employment, the defendant is not liable for any negligence of such persons as employees.
If the plaintiff were entitled to the rights of an invited person on the defendant’s land she could not recover without proof of
The plaintiff offered to show that two weeks before the accident another employee of the defendant was struck by a baseball during the noon hour while the defendant’s employees were playing in the same lot; the defendant offered to show that that accident occurred while the men were playing on the street. This evidence was excluded subject to the plaintiff’s exception. The injury to an employee other than the plaintiff was plainly res inter alios, its admission would have presented collateral issues and was rightly excluded. Whitney v. Gross, 140 Mass. 232. Menard v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 150 Mass. 386, 388. McDowell v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. 164 Mass. 394. Noyes v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 213 Mass. 9, 11, 12.
Exceptions overruled.