296 Mass. 165 | Mass. | 1936
These actions for personal injury and property damage all arise out of a collision between two automobiles on the Newburyport Turnpike, so called, at Rowley. The operators and passengers of both automobiles were friends who were travelling to Old Orchard, Maine, to spend the day.
In his opening to the jury counsel for the defendant said, “I think John Boyajian, the husband, will testify substantially as his wife does . . . look these people over. They are Armenians . . . They are friends ... I ask you to look these people over, that they were Armenians, that they are friends of these plaintiffs, that one of them is related if you call it a relation. Find out where their interest would be in this case in telling the truth, whether it would be to help their case or the case of their friends and distant relatives. Study them as you will, see if they have a regard for the truth, and then later counsel will argue the case to you.” Upon objection by counsel for the plain
It would seem from the record that the “Armenians” referred to in the remarks of the defendant’s counsel were the defendant herself and her husband, and it also appears that this was the understanding of the judge at the time, but even if the jury might have understood that the reference was to the plaintiffs, or to all of the parties alike, and even if it might be thought to carry some flavor of race disparagement, which we do not imply, the plaintiffs suffered no harm in view of the instructions of the judge, particularly his positive direction in the charge that the jury should “make certain” that the incident did not operate to the plaintiffs’ prejudice. O’Connell v. Dow, 182 Mass. 541, 548. Quinan v. Famous Players-Lasky Corp. 267 Mass. 501, 523. Gartland v. Freeman, 277 Mass. 520, 522. The present case is distinguishable from London v. Bay State Street Railway, 231 Mass. 480, where the instructions were held inadequate to cure the harm done.
The remaining exceptions require little discussion. A
Exceptions overruled.