The plaintiff, a district nurse, was injured while being driven by the defendant, a doctor, in his automobile. The jury were warranted in finding that at the time of the accident the defendant was driving the automobile negligently and that his neglect was the cause of the injury to the plaintiff.
The facts were, or could have been found to be, substantially as follows: The defendant had turned out of the main street into Mill Circle, which led “off to the right gradually,” and not at a right angle. In going from the main street to Mill Circle there was not much of a grade at first, but later on it “ comes pretty steep.” The accident happened at “the beginning of the steep pitch.” The road was crowned at this point, the surface was somewhat loose and it had rained a little that day. The defendant was in the habit of going over this Mill Circle road two or three times a week and was familiar with the place. Before the defendant took the hill he was running twenty-five to thirty miles an hour, when he came
It is true that the mere fact of the car’s skidding is not evidence of negligence. Williams v. Holbrook,
The defendant’s main defence is that the plaintiff and the defendant (district nurse and doctor) were engaged in a common enterprise, and that since it has been held that those engaged in a common enterprise are both liable for an accident caused in the carrying out of that enterprise (Adams v. Smith,
We are of opinion that it could not have been so ruled. The plaintiff was hired and paid by the Women’s Club of Winchendon to attend patients (who “could not afford a nurse”) when called upon to do so by the doctor in charge of such a patient. She testified that it was “a common thing for the different doctors to take you to their cases when they were making their calls” when the patient was so far out of town as the patient was to whom the defendant was taking the plaintiff at the time here in question.
The result is that the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained; and that (in accordance with the stipulation of the parties) judgment must be entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,600. It is
So ordered.
