153 Mass. 57 | Mass. | 1891
These were actions brought for causing the death of the plaintiffs’ children respectively. Two of them were brought by the plaintiffs on their own behalf, for loss of the services of the deceased; but it being admitted that the children were killed instantly, the court below ruled that the actions could not be maintained, and the exceptions to this ruling are waived. The other two actions were brought by the plaintiffs as administrators of their sons. At the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence, the court ruled that these actions also could not be maintained; and the plaintiffs excepted.
The accident took place at a crossing of the railroad track by Adams Street, Malden. The first question raised is whether the so called street was a highway, town way, or travelled place, within the Pub. Sts. c. 112, §§ 163-165, so as to make the defendant liable to an action under § 213 of that chapter, if it failed to give the warnings required. •
We are of opinion that there was evidence for the jury that the crossing was a highway by prescription. There was
Next, we cannot say that there was no evidence, slight as the evidence was, that the defendant failed to ring its bell or sound its whistle. One witness testified that he heard no noise made by the engine before the children were struck; another, that he heard three sharp whistles just as the boys were struck, but heard no whistle before those. This went further than the testimony in Tully v. Fitchburg Railroad, 134 Mass. 499, 502, that the witness did not remember whether he heard a whistle or not. The witnesses said that they remembered that they did not hear it. Dublin, Wicklow, & Wexford Railway v. Slattery, 3 App. Cas. 1155,1164,1165. See Menard v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 150 Mass. 386. There was evidence that there were no gates and no sign-boards at the crossing; also, that the train went by at the rate of forty miles an hour. If there was no bell rung nor whistle sounded, it might have been found that the omission contributed to the injury. Doyle v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 145 Mass. 386.
Finally, we cannot say that it appears incontrovertibly that the children were guilty of gross negligence. It seems that they were eleven and ten years old respectively, and so short that a fence on the side of Adams Street made it impossible for them to see the train until they were very near the track. There was evidence that they looked. Whether they could have done so without seeing the train, we do not consider. There was evidence that the train which killed them was covered from their sight by the end- of a nearer train going the other way. Mayo
Exceptions sustained.