274 Mass. 347 | Mass. | 1931
These are two actions of tort and were tried to a jury. The plaintiffs are husband and wife. The declaration of the wife, as amended, was in two counts; the first based upon the negligence of the defendant; the second upon the wilful, reckless and wanton misconduct
On his brief the plaintiff Robert G. Leonard waived the second count in his declaration for medical expense incurred in behalf of his wife, Elizabeth A. Leonard, and agreed that judgment may be entered for the defendant on that count. Prior to the charge the defendant presented the following requests for rulings and instructions to the jury in each of the cases: “ 2. If the jury find that the registration of the automobile, in which the plaintiff was riding contained an incorrect maker’s number, the automobile was improperly registered.” “ 3. If the application for registration made by Robert G. Leonard incorrectly gave the maker’s number of his automobile and the registration as issued contained said incorrect number, then the automobile was improperly registered and was a trespasser and a nuisance upon the highway.” To the
The facts as they are stated in the bills of exceptions are in substance as follows: The accident occurred at noon on Labor Day, 1927, on a much travelled highway between Boston and Newburyport, called the Newburyport Turnpike, in Lynnfield. At the point of the accident the road was perfectly straight in both directions for as much as a mile; it was of concrete construction and about twelve to fifteen feet wide. There were dirt shoulders on the side of the concrete; and near the right side of the road going toward Newburyport there were poles carrying wires. The plaintiff Elizabeth A. Leonard was not licensed to operate motor vehicles but was driving her husband’s automobile on the license of her husband, who was riding with her at the time of the accident. They were driving toward Newburyport and the defendant was going in the opposite direction. Mrs. Leonard was driving on the right hand side of the road at the rate of twenty-two to twenty-four miles an hour. There was other traffic going in the same direction a few car lengths ahead, and an automobile a few car lengths in the rear going in the same direction. On the other side of the road “ there was kind of a jam up the road a ways going toward Boston.” On that side the- traffic “ was heavier and the cars were packed close together . . . probably three feet apart.” The driver of the defendant’s automobile on the plaintiffs’ left pulled his automobile out of line to the left and came, directly toward the front of the plaintiffs’ automobile at a speed of thirty miles an hour. The plaintiff Elizabeth A. Leonard saw the automobile when it first came out of line toward her thirty-five to forty feet away. To' avoid being hit, she turned her automobile shortly to her right and struck a pole seven or eight feet from the side of the road.
The defendant “ concedes that there was evidence which . . . would warrant findings of negligence on the part of the driver of the defendant’s automobile, and that
As respects the issue of the legality of the registration of the automobile driven by the plaintiffs, raised by the answer of the defendant and by the requests for instructions which were denied in both cases, the jury on the evidence would be warranted in finding the following facts: Robert G. Leonard purchased the automobile on May 7, 1927, from the North Shore Motors Company. At the time of the accident he was familiar with his original registration certificate on his car, which was then in force. This registration gave the maker’s number of the automobile involved in the accident as E 29175, whereas the true number was E 298175. His application for registration gave the maker’s number as E 29175 and he learned later that the maker’s number which appeared on his application and on his registration were both mistakes. As this accident happened before the passage of St. 1928, c. 187, Rosenthal v. Liss, 269 Mass. 373, it is plain the registration was illegal, in that it did not include the number affixed by the maker. G. L. c. 90, § 2. Staley v. Wilbur, 258 Mass. 481. Wallace v. New Bedford & Onset Street Railway, 259 Mass. 20. The automobile was therefore a trespasser and a nuisance upon the highway. The defendant’s requests for rulings and instructions numbered “ 2 ” and “ 3,” supra, should have been given.
As respects the agency of Clark, who was driving the automobile of the defendant at the time of the accident, we think the defendant was not entitled to a ruling that he had overcome by evidence the prima facie case created by St. 1928, c. 317. Thomes v. Meyer Store Inc. 268 Mass. 587.
As respects the issues of wilful, wanton and reckless misconduct, the jury, on the undisputed evidence, warrant-
It results that the defendant’s exception to the refusal to instruct the jury as requested must be sustained; that the exceptions of the plaintiff Elizabeth A. Leonard to the allowance of the defendant’s motion to direct a verdict for the defendant on the second count of the declaration must be sustained; and that the exceptions of the plaintiff Robert G. Leonard to the allowance of the defendant’s motion to direct a verdict for the defendant on the third and fourth counts of the declaration must be sustained. All other exceptions in each case are overruled.
So ordered.