155 Mass. 387 | Mass. | 1892
If a passenger on a horse car is injured while intoxicated, this fact alone does not prevent his maintaining an action; but if his intoxication contributes to the injury in any degree, he cannot recover. Maguire v. Middlesex Railroad, 115 Mass. 239. See also Alger v. Lowell, 3 Allen, 402.
That the plaintiff in this case was drunk at the time of the accident is not disputed, and the evidence introduced in his behalf shows that he had been in this condition for the preceding twenty-four hours. He himself testified that he had no recollection of taking the car, or of any of the facts connected with the accident; and that he first came to a realization of his injuries at the hospital, to which he was taken after the accident.
Shortly before the accident, he was standing on the front platform, with his hands on the guard rail and his body swaying back and forth. The rate of speed was moderate, being four or five miles an hour; and although the up and down motion of the car was such at the time the plaintiff went off as to throw another passenger towards the driver, his face striking the driver’s shoulder, the bill of exceptions states that there was no evidence of any defect in the rails or in the road bed. There is, therefore, nothing to show that there was anything extraordinary in this motion. See Stewart v. Boston & Providence Railroad, 146 Mass. 605.
On this evidence, we are of opinion that the jury would not have been warranted in finding that the plaintiff exercised that degree of care which men of ordinary prudence and caution exercise under like circumstances, or in finding that the plaintiff’s condition did not in any degree contribute to the injury. The ruling of the presiding justice directing a verdict for the defendant was therefore right.
Exceptions overruled.