274 Mass. 83 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of tort tried to a jury. The declaration was in two counts, the first alleging ordinary negligence and the second gross negligence on the part of the defendant: At the close of the trial the defendant made a motion for a directed verdict in his favor on both counts. The judge directed a verdict" as requested on the first count, but refused to direct a verdict on the second count, and the defendant duly excepted. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The bill of exceptions contains all the evidence which is material to the defendant’s exception taken to the refusal to grant his motion.
The evidence warranted the finding of the following facts: Sometime in the early morning of May 14, 1927, the plaintiff went to the lunch room of the defendant on Bridge Street, in Lowell. After his lunch and time spent in talking with different persons, the plaintiff at about three-thirty put on his hat and coat. The defendant and one Finnegan were just starting out from the room and “ they said, ‘ are you going home? ’ ” The plaintiff replied “yes” and they said, “we will drive you down,” and to this the plaintiff said “ all right.” The car they rode in was a two-door sedan with a front seat that tipped forward. The plaintiff got in first by pushing the front seat down, that is, the seat next to the driver’s seat, and climbed through to the back seat, the front seats being separate and the back seat a full bench; then the defendant took the driver’s seat and Finnegan sat at his right. As the car proceeded they soon came upon “one Toohey who had left the lunch room shortly before they had. The defendant “ picked him up to .take, him to. his.
The evidence warranted the finding that the brakes on the car were not good and that the car would skid when the brakes were applied. There was further evidence that warranted the finding that the defendant knew that the brakes were defective, knew that the brakes had to be relined, and knew that the day before the accident the car when driven about the streets by Finnegan skidded over to the left side when the brakes were applied. There was further evidence that the roads were wet and slippery, that the defendant was familiar with the curve at the place of the accident, and that when the plaintiff stood up in the back of the car to get out at Aiken Street the defendant and Finnegan “ pushed him back into the seat.”
The contention of the defendant that the skidding of the car which preceded the collision with the tree was no.t of itself evidence of negligence, much less of gross negligence, in the circumstances here disclosed is obviously unsound. At least one of the reasons for the skidding was defective brakes which had caused the car on the day before the accident to skid to the left when the brakes were applied; this defective condition of the brakes was known to the defendant and could have been remedied before the proposed trip to Lakeview was begun. It is manifest the jury on the facts here disclosed would be justified in finding that the defendant was indifferent to the point of criminality to every legal obligation which
Exceptions overruled.