179 Mass. 542 | Mass. | 1901
The only question argued in this case is whether there was evidence that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.
The plaintiff made out the following case: When he got just past the flagman’s house, he looked to the north towards the armory and then to the south in the other direction to see whether a car was coming, and saw none. At this point he had a clear view of the track from the corner of Main and Richardson Streets for three hundred to three hundred and fifty feet north towards the armory. Seeing no car coming, he drove on. The flagman’s house is eighty feet from the tracks of the defendant’s railway, in Main Street. From that point until the forefeet of the plaintiff’s horse were at the further rail of the defendant’s
We cannot say that the effect of the trees on Richardson ■Street, or the trees on Main Street, or a combination of the trees on both streets, was not such as the plaintiff testified to ; neither can we say, of our own knowledge, that if the gong was not sounded, the plaintiff, under the conditions existing on the night in question, must have heard the buzzing of the electricity or the rattle of the car, if he had listened. If the plaintiff looked when he was eighty feet away and could not see a car coming from the direction in question until he was personally within two or three feet of the nearer rail of the track, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that he was guilty of contributory negligence in driving on over the intervening eighty feet at the usual rate of speed of the defendant’s cars at this point, listening to hear if a car was coming and looking for a car the first moment when it was possible for him to see one. It is difficult for a traveller to know how to act at a crossing such as this
On the whole, we are of opinion that it was a question for the jury to decide whether the condition of things at this place was that disclosed by the evidence of the plaintiff, and, if it was, whether the plaintiff exercised due care. See in this connection Hicks v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 164 Mass. 424; Tilton v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 169 Mass. 253.
The case presented by this bill of exceptions is altogether different from the case considered by us when this action was here before. Kelly v. Wakefield & Stoneham Street Railway, 175 Mass. 331. The plan of the premises now presented has the points of the compass on.it, and it appears that Main Street runs north and south and Richardson Street east and west. We understood before that a person at the flagman’s house was prevented by the trees from seeing a car for two thirds of the distance from the corner of Main and Richardson Streets to the armory going north from the corner, and could see a car for the remaining one third of that distance. It now appears that a car can be seen for two thirds of
Exceptions sustained.