280 Mass. 496 | Mass. | 1932
This is an action of tort wherein the plaintiff, as administratrix of the estate of Francis W. Bums, seeks to recover damages for the conscious suffering and death sus
The facts as the jury might find were substantially as follows: At the time of the accident the intestate was nearly twelve years old and was a student in a local high school. Shortly before the accident he left the school building with a group of boys, walked down the east side of Main Street, then, with two boys, named Lunney and Maloney, crossed over to the west sidewalk and walked on that side until he came to an antique shop near the corner of Main and Lucian streets. Uninvited, the boys decided to go into the yard of the shop for the purpose of getting some crab apples. While they were there a police officer came to the door of the shop and yelled to them to “get out of there.” They ran out of the yard to the sidewalk in the order of Lunney, then Maloney, and then the intestate. Lunney ran toward Webster Square to a white house which is next to the antique shop. Maloney followed him. The intestate ran fast as he left the sidewalk, and was hit by a truck that was passing from his left almost opposite where the intestate left the sidewalk. He was struck by the right back wheel and was run over. He was not hit by the front part of the truck. There was no evidence as to whether the intestate looked to the right or left at any time between the accident and his leaving the sidewalk.
There was evidence that the driver of the truck sounded the horn; that the course of the truck was changed when the intestate left the sidewalk — it swerved toward the left and before it swerved it had been driven with the left wheels in the car track and the right wheels on the travelled part of the road; that the truck was a little below Lucian Street which
On the above evidence, we are of opinion that the verdict for the defendant must stand for the reason that, as matter of law, the intestate was negligent and such negligence was a contributory cause of his injury. This conclusion is necessitated by the testimony of witnesses for both the plaintiff and the defendant, wherein it appears indisputably that the intestate, while running from the sidewalk into the street in an effort to escape from the police, exercised for his safety neither the care required of an adult nor that required of a child with the presumed mentality of a high school student. Swetzoff v. O’Brien, 226 Mass. 438. Sullivan v. Chadwick, 236 Mass. 130. Murphy v. Boston Elevated Railway, 262 Mass. 485.
Exceptions overruled.