226 Mass. 474 | Mass. | 1917
The motor car that the defendant owned and was operating on Pleasant Street, a public highway in the city
The defendant offered testimony tending to prove that the machine had been since the first of January, 1914, was at the time of the accident, and continued to be until April or May, 1914, in the control of one Fontaine for the purpose of sale, of renting or for use; that Fontaine kept a garage; that he was a dealer in motor vehicles as such a person is defined by St. 1909, c. 534, §§ 1, 4; that Fontaine as such dealer had number plates registered under St. 1909, c. 534, § 4; that the plates which were on the defendant’s machine were registered plates for the year 1914, and were paid for by Fontaine.
It was not shown affirmatively that Fontaine had applied to the highway commission for any distinguishing numbers or marks, but the jury well could find that Fontaine had the distinguishing numbers for the year 1914, and from that fact could find that he not only had applied to the commission but also that the commission had acted favorably upon his application and had caused to be issued to him as a dealer distinguishing marks for that year. That Fontaine was a dealer could be found from the testimony of one Briggs, who answered “Garage, yes, dealer and repairs” in response to the question ^Let’s see, this Fontaine is a dealer in automobiles, isn’t he?” The fact that “Nowhere does it appear in evidence what knowledge Briggs had of the nature or character of Fontaine’s business except above testimony” does not prove that the statement was not true. The knowledge of Briggs may well have been intimate and accurate, and the weight to be given to his testimony was therefore a matter for the consideration of the jury.
That Fontaine was in control of the motor car of the defendant for the purpose of sale, or for renting or for use, could be found from the uncontradicted fact that Fontaine put his own registered number plates on it and from the testimony of the defendant that “he gave his car to Mr. Fontaine for sale, to sell it or use it or let it... that jf Fontaine sold it he would get a commission, the same as any one who sells a machine or a house for some one else,” that he asked Fontaine to use the car, “that if Mr. Fontaine had let the car the money for letting it would have to go to Mr. Quellette,” the defendant.
The evidence required the submission to the jury of the issues, whether Fontaine was a dealer in motor vehicles, whether he controlled as a dealer the motor car of the defendant, and whether at the time of the accident the motor car had upon it a distinguishing number or mark given to the dealer by the highway commission; as also, whether the dealer’s right to use the num
Should the jury find that Fontaine was not a dealer in motor vehicles or was not the registered holder of number plates for the year 1914 or was not in control of the defendant’s machine, or should it find that the motor car did not in fact bear the number or mark of the dealer, the defendant’s requests “2. That the plaintiff must prove that the defendant was negligent in the operation of the automobile” and "3. That if the defendant was operating an unregistered automobile, that said operation was only evidence of the defendant’s negligence but not conclusive,” could not have been given, because, if the machine was unregistered by owner or dealer, its presence on the highway was in itself unlawful and against the right of all other persons who were lawfully using the highway. It was “ outside the pale of travellers” and was an outlaw, Dudley v. Northampton Street Railway, 202 Mass. 443, Holden v. McGillicuddy, 215 Mass. 563; and because as a wrongdoer and creator of a nuisance the defendant is liable at least for all the direct injury resulting from such act, although such resulting injury could not have been contemplated as the probable result of the act done, and therefore was not the result of an act of negligence. “ If I am sued for a nuisance and the nuisance is proved, it is no defence on my part to say and to prove that I have taken all reasonable care to prevent it.” Rapier v. London Tramways Co. [1893] 2 Ch. 588, 600. Amberg v. Kinley, 214 N. Y. 531. Fairbanks v. Kemp, ante, 75.
Exceptions sustained.