This is an action of tort brought by the plaintiff, as administratrix of her husband’s estate, to recover for his death in an automobile accident on August 26, 1922. The plaintiff’s intestate was driving a loaded truck from Providence toward Fall River. The defendant’s loaded truck was being driven in the opposite direction by his grandson, who was admitted to be the agent of the' defendant acting within the course of his employment. A collision between them occurred in Swansea in this Commonwealth at about 4:30 in the morning. There was no witness to the accident except the drivers of the respective trucks. The plaintiff discontinued as to the count for conscious suffering and the case was submitted to the jury on the count for negligently causing death. All the evidence bearing on the question of liability is not reported, but it is clear from the charge that the only question submitted to the jury on this, issue related to the
Interrogatories filed by the plaintiff were answered by the defendant under oath. When he was testifying as a witness at the trial and was being cross-examined by the plaintiff, he stated in substance that he gained the information concerning the accident not from talking with his grandson but from conferring with others; that he did not talk with him before answering. He then was asked whether his grandson was with him when he answered the interrogatories and he said, “ He was not.” Upon objection this question and answer were excluded. The witness then was asked whether he was in his attorney’s office when he answered the interrogatories, and upon objection the question was excluded and the trial judge inquired whether there were any further questions. Counsel for the plaintiff then "asked to have his exception saved to the exclusion of the last two questions. If it be assumed that this exception was properly saved, there was no error in excluding the questions. The interrogatories had not been offered in evidence when the questions were asked, and there is nothing in the state of the evidence at the time or in the provisions of G. L. c. 231, § 62, as to inquiries to be made by a party before answering interrogatories to make the testimony then material. The exercise by the trial judge of his discretion in limiting the scope of cross-examinatian on irrelevant matters presents no question of law. Prescott v. Ward,
The driver of the defendant’s truck testified that the decedent was approaching him coming around a curve on the witness’s left side of the road; that the decedent turned to his left and then went out into the road and hit the left front wheel of the truck of the defendant which was
The evidence was uncontradicted that the operator of the defendant’s truck had a Rhode Island license to operate motor vehicles but none in Massachusetts. The defendant’s truck was registered in this Commonwealth-only. The judge in his charge, having stated that the statute requires that persons must be licensed to drive automobiles in this Commonwealth and that the statute authorizing nonresidents to operate motor vehicles here did not apply because the truck was registered in this State, said that the failure to comply with the law is
It is assumed for the purpose of this decision that the statute of Rhode Island requiring operators of motor vehicles to have licenses has for its aim the protection of the public by confining the right to operate such vehicles in that State to persons shown to be qualified. Pub. Laws of R. I. 1916, c. 1354, § 7. See Bourne v. Whitman,
In Guinan v. Famous Players-Lasky Corp.
In Pigeon v. Massachusetts Northeastern Street Railway,
These decisions seem to have established two rules (1) that the violation of the statute forbidding a person to operate a motor vehicle upon a way unless licensed is evidence of negligence of the operator to be considered by the jury with the other evidence tending to prove his negligence, and (2) that the violation of the statute forbidding an owner to allow an unlicensed person to operate his motor vehicle is evidence for the consideration of the jury bearing on the negligence of the owner. In Brown v. Alter,
Exceptions sustained.
