173 Mass. 373 | Mass. | 1899

Holmes, J.

These are actions for personal injuries and death, brought by the administratrix of one Timothy Leary. Leary was a passenger upon one of the defendant’s trains, and presumably was bound for Waltham, where he lived. The train had run beyond the Waltham station in order to use a switch, and had backed into the station, had stopped and had started, when Leary was found under the wheels on the wrong side of the train. How he came to be there is pure matter of conjecture. If we assume, contrary to the fair import of the evidence, that the train started too quickly, there is nothing to show that that fact had anything to do with the accident. If we assume that the condition of the road was dangerous for passengers alighting upon the side away from the station, because of testimony that there was snow “ where it had been thrown off the tracks alongside in a heap about a foot or so from the track,” which would be going a great way, again it does not appear that that circumstance contributed to the accident. It does not appear that Leary did not know as well as the other passengers who got out at the same time which was the proper side to get out at. He must have seen the others as they left the train, so that it would be an unwarranted conjecture to attribute his being on the wrong side to a failure to warn him, if there was any duty to warn him within McKimble v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 139 Mass. 542.

In all cases of this sort, where the evidence stops short of direct testimony to the personal causes of the accident, the question is whether the jury are warranted by common experience *375in saying that such accidents are so much more likely to. be due to the defendant’s fault than to any of the other possible causes, that they ought to presume that this one was due to such fault. This is a practical question of experience, and depends upon the nature of the particular case. Clare v. New York & New England Railroad, 167 Mass. 39, 40. Graham, v. Badger, 164 Mass. 42, 47. In the case at bar it seems to us that to attribute Leary’s death to the defendant would be founding a verdict upon a guess.

The evidence that it was a frequent thing for passengers to become confused and to get out on the wrong side of the train was one of those inquiries into collateral issues which, even if instructive or theoretically relevant, are left largely to the discretion of the presiding justice. See Reeve v. Dennett, 145 Mass. 23, 28. Exceptions overruled.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.