198 Mass. 232 | Mass. | 1908
The plaintiff was driving an ice wagon on a principal street in Salem, in the centre of which were two parallel tracks of the defendant. The street ran generally in an easterly and westerly direction, and the plaintiff was proceeding westward on the northerly side of the street. He was driving a pair of horses attached to an ordinary covered, springless ice cart, with no cut under, weighing from two thousand eight hundred to three thousand pounds, which was loaded with about three and one half tons of ice. His employer’s office was on the southerly side of the street, and nearly opposite the place of accident. The stables used in the ice business were about one hundred and fifty feet back from the street line and there were large scales in front of the stables, both to the west of the office building. The horses and all but the rear part of the wagon had crossed and were clear of the northerly track, on which, in the same direction as that from which the plaintiff had driven, came the car which occasioned the injury. The accident occurred at just before noon of a clear day. There was evidence tending to. show that the plaintiff was an experienced driver about fifty-nine years old; that, as he came along the street opposite to the office of his employer, he was signalled to cross the street; he looked “ back out by the side ” of the wagon to see if anything was in the way, “ far enough back to see that it was perfectly safe to go over ” perhaps “ two or three hundred feet,” and saw no car, ánd saw none until the wagon was struck; the horses were walking; one Porter, who signalled the plaintiff to come across, saw the car coming, and thought there was time for the plaintiff to go across in front of it; the plaintiff needed to be on the extreme right of the street in order to make a turn into the scales, because a dead axle, like that which he was driving, required much room to turn, and it was necessary to make a square turn and would not be a proper way to go diagonally across the tracks; the car was going at a speed of between ten and twelve miles an hour, and did not slow up at all until it struck the wagon, although there was an outcry by passengers when it was at a distance estimated from thirty
The principles of law which govern this case have been recently and oftentimes stated. The street railway company has no exclusive right to occupancy of that portion of the highway on which its tracks are located. Other travellers in vehicles have an equal right to use this, as well as different portions of the way, not only for crossing but for progressing, subject only to the restriction that they must not unreasonably obstruct the street cars, which by the limitations of their construction and legal rights can proceed only on their rails. The duty of using reasonable care to avoid collisions rests upon all travellers alike, the trolley car as well as the ice wagon. Under some circumstances, it would not be unreasonable for the driver of a vehicle to deliberately drive upon a track under conditions which would compel the motorman of an electric car to abate its speed in order to avoid peril of injury. Under other circumstances, such conduct might be grossly negligent. The place in the street where the plaintiff attempted to cross the tracks of the defendant was a proper one for crossing, and, from the location of the office, scales and stable of his employer, one where the defendant might reasonably have expected heavy teams to cross frequently. The plaintiff was not oblivious of his own safety, but looked back a distance of two or three hundred feet before turning across the tracks, and saw no car. There was no evidence compelling the conclusion that the car was at that time within that distance and within his line of vision, and for this reason, if for no other, Fitzgerald v. Boston Elevated Railway, 194 Mass. 242, and Beirne v. Lawrence & Methuen Street Railway, 197 Mass. 173, are not in point. Whether he ought to have taken the precaution to look further or whether he could reasonably expect to get across before a car any greater distance away would reach him, or
The question put to the plaintiff, for the purpose of showing that he did not believe there was any peril in crossing the tracks as he did, namely, “ At the time you crossed over did you think there was any danger in passing over the tracks as you did ? ” seems to have been competent under McCrohan v. Davison, 187 Mass. 466, and Whitman v. Boston Elevated Railway, 181 Mass. 138, although, if all the circumstances and the fact that a judgment was formed by the plaintiff at the time were in evidence, a verdict might not be set aside for the sole reason that such a question had been excluded. Whitman v. Boston Elevated Railway, 181 Mass. 138. See 1 Wigmore on Evidence, 581. The real question, however, is what a reasonably prudent and cautious man, exercising his faculties for his protection, would have done under all the circumstances, and not what the plaintiff thought, although the result of his deliberate judgment then formed may throw some light upon the subject. No error appears in the exclusion of evidence as to custom of ice teams stopping and crossing the street on orders from the office.
Exceptions sustained.