228 Mass. 472 | Mass. | 1917
This is an action of tort to recover for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Helen I. Marchant. The evidence was ample to support a finding that the intestate was struck by a train owned and operated by the defendant, while the intestate was travelling over a grade crossing of the defendant’s road upon Elliott Street, a public highway in Beverly.
The accident occurred on July 10, T913, and the intestate, (hereinafter called Helen,) aged two years and five months, was instantly killed. On the day of the accident and for some weeks before, Helen was living with her aunt. On the afternoon of the day of the accident the .aunt gave permission to her daughter Evelyn, aged seven, to call for Marie, aged seven, to go down to the playground; she also gave Evelyn permission to take Helen, with an admonition “to take good care of her and hold her hand.” She knew that the children had to cross the railroad tracks to get to the playground; that it was a “dangerous crossing,” that a great many trains ran over it; that sometimes trains went over it very fast and were liable to come at any moment; that when the children got out of her sight they would begin to play, that they might be liable to stop on the street and play. She testified, “I knew, if I stopped to think of it, that Evelyn and Helen might meet some little friends and not go to the playground, but play in the street. I knew that Helen was less than three years old. I- knew that Evelyn had a good many friends of her own age in that neighborhood and that when Evelyn and Helen got on to the playground they could take up whatever amusement either one wanted to and would be liable to do that. They have sand
After leaving their home Evelyn and Helen went over the Cabot Street crossing to the home of Marie, and thence the three children went over the Cabot Street crossing again, down Elliott Street and over the Elliott Street crossing to the playground, the entrance to which is one hundred and seventy feet from the nearest point to the crossing. After passing through the opening or space for them to get in Evelyn testified, “Marie and I played around before we saw Leo. I don’t remember what Helen was doing.” “Leo got on the tilt with me. . . . Then Leo and I went seesawing.” “Helen was watching us on the seesaws. I did not say anything to her after I got on the tilts. ... I don’t know how long Helen stayed near the tilting boards while we were tilting ... I did not see Helen again until I went to look for her. I was having a great time there playing on the seesaw. I kept seesawing as long as I wanted to, but I don’t know how long.” Leo, aged nine, testified: “My sister Evelyn and a girl named Marie were with Helen. . . . The three were near the tilts. Evelyn and I were on one tilt and Marie and another girl on another one. Helen was right near the tilts with us. I saw Helen and Evelyn when they came to the playground that afternoon. The tilts were the first things I went to. . . . The last I saw of Helen she was around the tilts with us. ... I didn’t see Helen leave the playground. About fifteen minutes after-1 had seen her watching us I went looking for her around the playground. I didn’t find her, and then, after we were looking around for about five minutes we heard the whistle on the train.”
While Evelyn was' engaged in seesawing on the tilt with Leo,
The accident taking place before the passage of St. 1914, c. 553, after ruling rightly as a matter of law that Helen was too young to be capable of taking care of herself, the presiding judge submitted to the jury the question of the due care of the aunt when she committed Helen to the custody and oversight of Evelyn, with full and accurate instructions. We are of opinion that the issue presented was one of fact for the consideration of the jury on all the evidence.
The presiding judge submitted also to the jury the question of the due care of Evelyn. In an action of tort for negligence it is the settled law in this Commonwealth that an infant plaintiff, incapable of- exercising due care on its own behalf, must prove that its custodian in fact exercised the degree of care which the law requires to be exercised by that person in the reasonable conduct of his own life. Casey v. Smith, 152 Mass. 294. We assume Evelyn was bound to conduct herself in the care of Helen as children of her age would reasonably be expected to do. Collins v. South Boston Railroad, 142 Mass. 301. Travers v. Boston Elevated Railway, 217 Mass. 188. Applying the rule to the undisputed facts, there is no evidence that Evelyn exercised any care of Helen whatsoever after the playground was reached; she ceased on their arrival to guard and protect Helen, allowed her to wander about at will, and herself became lost to the duty she had undertaken in the pleasure afforded by the tilt. The
Moreover, the evidence is absolute that at the time and moment of the accident neither Helen nor any one on her behalf was in the active and actual exercise of due care. Garabedian v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 225 Mass. 65.
It follows that the requests “4. There is no evidence that Helen I. Marchant was in the exercise of the due care required by St. 1906, c. 463, Part I, § 63,” and “5. There is no evidence that the persons in charge of said Helen I. Marchant were in the exercise of the due care required by St. 1906, c. 463, Part I, § 63,” should have been given, and the second question should not have been submitted to the jury. The exceptions are sustained, and judgment is to be entered for the defendant. St. 1909, c. 236.
So ordered.