275 Mass. 461 | Mass. | 1931
These are actions of tort. The first is
brought to recover for personal injuries arising out of a
The collision occurred in Boston about eleven o’clock in the evening of September 7, 1927. The plaintiff in the first action, who will hereafter be referred to as the plaintiff, was a guest in an automobile operated by one Charles H. Cunningham, and was seated on the right side of the rear seat. There was testimony from which it could have been found that the Cunningham automobile was proceeding along the right hand side of Chauncy Street toward Essex Street, the driver intending to cross Essex Street and enter Harrison Avenue, which leads off Essex Street on the other side thereof and somewhat to the right of Chauncy Street. Upon approaching Essex Street, the operator looked to the right and to the left, saw no automobile coming from .the right on Essex Street, sounded his horn and started to cross Essex Street at a speed not in excess of ten miles an hour. When entering Harrison Avenue he saw lights from a motor .vehicle coming from the right about twenty or thirty feet away, and when his automobile was almost into Harrison Avenue, the rear being about two feet out on Essex Street, it was struck at the right rear wheel. After the accident the Cunningham automobile was on the left side of Harrison Avenue and the taxicab was at the right of the automobile. The automobile in which the plaintiff was riding weighed about forty-two hundred pounds. As a result of the impact the wheels were lifted and the driving shaft was detached from the body of the automobile and “the bumper. . . . was knocked in towards the Harrison Avenue curb three or four feet.” Cunningham testified that in crossing Essex Street he drove to the left side of Harrison Avenue and did not turn to the
It is plain that upon the entire evidence verdicts could not properly have been directed for the defendant. When a collision occurs under circumstances like those here present, at the corner of two streets or at an intersection of streets, the due care of the plaintiff and the negligence of the defendant are generally questions of fact for the jury. Salisbury v. Boston Elevated Railway, 239 Mass. 430. Daris v. Middlesex & Boston Street Railway, 241 Mass. 580. Hamel v. Sweatt, 256 Mass. 581. Bogert v. Corcoran, 260 Mass. 206, 209. Bagdazurian v. Nathanson, 269 Mass. 386. The jury could have inferred from the testimony that the taxicab was travelling along Essex Street at a high rate of speed, or that it turned into Essex Street from Harrison Avenue Extension (which joined Essex Street to the right ■of Chauncy Street) at a time when the Cunningham automobile was crossing Essex Street. The fact that the taxicab struck it in the rear when it had almost passed over Essex Street was a circumstance tending to show negligence of the defendant. Payson v. Checker Taxi Co. 262 Mass. 22, 26. The evidence required that the case be submitted to the jury upon the question of negligence of the defendant. Barnett v. Boston Elevated Railway, 244 Mass. 418. Stickel v. Cassasa, 268 Mass. 59. Austin v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 269 Mass. 420.
The defendant requested the judge to give the following instruction to the jury: “If the operator of the plaintiff’s
The defendant excepted to that portion of the judge’s charge relating to the law of the road. G. L. c. 89, § 8, as amended by St. 1926, c. 330, § 1. This exception cannot be sustained. The instructions were free from error. The explanation to the jury of the meaning of the words “point of intersection” found in the statute was in accordance with the interpretation of those words as laid down by this court. Fournier v. Zinn, 257 Mass. 575. Cunningham v. New England Transportation Co. 267 Mass. 238. Mahoney v. Boston Elevated Railway, 271 Mass. 274. See now St. 1929, c. 147.
As no error of law appears in the conduct of the trial the entry in each case must be '
Exceptions overruled.