These two actions of tort, each brought to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the alleged negligence of the defendant, were tried together. Motions of the defendant for directed verdicts were denied and the defendant excepted. There was a verdict in each case for the plaintiff.
There was evidence that the plaintiffs went to the defendant’s premises with three other persons to buy a pig. It is not contradicted that the evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiffs were injured as the result of events which occurred while they, in accordance with the defendant’s invitation, were on the defendant’s premises as customers to whom the defendant owed the usual duty of care owed to business visitors. See Kelley v. Goldberg, 288 Mass. 79, 81. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiffs’ injuries
It could be found that the strain upon the platform caused by the plaintiff Amaru’s coming upon it was not so extraordinary that the defendant, in the exercise of reasonable care, was not bound to anticipate it. Apart from a strain so caused, there was no indication in the evidence and no possibility which the plaintiff was required to exclude (compare Walker v. Benz Kid Co. 279 Mass. 533, 537) of any cause of the platform’s falling other than its defective condition. There was, moreover, evidence that before the platform fell it was supported on the side toward the building by a board or timber nailed to the building, and that after it fell some part of this board or timber remained in place, and there were a “lot of nails hanging on the building” and on this board or timber, and a few nails in a board
It properly is not argued that a finding of contributory negligence on the part of either plaintiff was required.
In each case the entry must be
Exceptions overruled.