190 Mass. 208 | Mass. | 1906
The only question raised by this report is whether the jury had a right to find that the plaintiff went to the second story of the defendants’ building by the invitation of the defendants express or implied. The defendants’ building was a chair factory, four or more stories in height, with an office on the first floor, the upper floors being used for the storage of chairs and for manufacturing. There was evidence that one Kennedy, an expressman, had a contract with the defendants to cart and deliver their goods, and was accustomed to send the plaintiff, who was one of his drivers, to this factory to call for goods. The plaintiff testified that he had been accustomed, when so sent, to go to the defendants’ office and inquire for their shipper John Black to see if there were any goods to be taken ; that if Black was not there, he would ask the foreman if there was anything going, and the foreman would either tell him or say that he would have to see John, the shipper, and sometimes would say, “ He is upstairs ” ; whereupon the plaintiff would go upstairs and see him, if the shipper did not come down before ■there was time to go up; that sometimes one Reed, the defendants’ superintendent or manager, told him to see John; that when he asked Reed where John was, Reed would say he was upstairs, or send the plaintiff to some other part of the building; that he meant that Reed would tell him the direction where John would be, and he would go and find him; that the goods he was to take were delivered to him from the first floor, and he received them outside and took them on his wagon. He further testified that on this occasion he was sent by Kennedy to the defendants’ factory for goods; that he went to the office and asked if anything was going out, and Reed said, “ I cannot tell you; you will have to see John ” ; that the plaintiff asked, “ Where is John ? ” and Reed answered, “ He is upstairs ”; that the plaintiff said “ All right,” and went upstairs, and there shouted for John, and while going in the direction from which he thought he heard an answering voice, he fell through an open scuttle in the passageway, and received the injuries complained of.
The defendants asked the judge to rule that this language and testimony, if believed, would not constitute a sufficient invitation and authority to the plaintiff to go to the second story, and that
It is true that unless the plaintiff went into the second story of the defendants’ building by their invitation, if he was either a trespasser or merely a licensee, he cannot recover. Reardon v. Thompson, 149 Mass. 267, and cases there cited. But it seems plain to us that upon this evidence the jury might find that he went upstairs at the suggestion and invitation of the defendants’ manager; that he had a right, under the circumstances and in view of what had been done and said between them on previous occasions, to regard what Reed said to him as a request to him to go upstairs and see the shipper; that when Reed said, “You will have to see John,” and “He is upstairs,” he was entitled to treat this as an invitation and direction to him to go where the shipper was said to be, and where he had found him on previous occasions. Chenery v. Fitchburg Railroad, 160 Mass. 211. Gordon v. Cummings, 152 Mass. 513. Clark v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 164 Mass. 434, 439. Johanson v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 153 Mass. 57, 60.
According to the terms of the report, there must be
Judgment on the verdict.