211 Mass. 524 | Mass. | 1912
This case comes here on exceptions by the defendant to the refusal of the trial judge
1. At the time when the accident happened the plaintiff was between eleven and twelve years of age. The sidewalk of the street along which he was passing was obstructed for about one hundred and twenty-five feet by building operations. At each
2. There was evidence that the motorman’s view of the street was unobstructed and that the car ran from two hundred to two hundred and fifty feet after the accident before it was stopped. The testimony of the motorman and that of other witnesses for the defendant tended to contradict that of the plaintiff and his witnesses as to the manner in which the accident happened. But it was for the jury to say, taking all the circumstances into account, whether the motorman exercised due care. See Mullen v. Boston Elevated Railway, 209 Mass. 79.
Exceptions overruled.
There was evidence that the ends of these fences were within fifteen or eighteen inches of the nearer rail of the defendant’s track.
White, J.