301 Mass. 372 | Mass. | 1938
This is an action of tort to recover compensation for personal injuries. The case was first heard by an auditor, who found for the defendant, and thereafter it was tried to a jury. At the trial the auditor’s report was introduced in evidence and further evidence was presented by both parties. The declaration was in four counts, the first of which alleges negligence on the part of the defendant. At the close of the evidence the plaintiff waived the third count, and the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the other counts. This motion was allowed as to the second and fourth counts, but was denied as to the first count subject to the defendant’s exception. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff and the case comes before us on the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of her motion for a directed verdict, to the denial of certain requests for instructions, and to the giving of certain instructions to the jury.
An examination of the defendant’s exceptions to the judge’s refusal to give the farmer’s fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth requests for rulings, which related to the subject matter just discussed, discloses no error. It is unnecessary to recite them in detail. A consideration of the judge’s charge bearing on that subject matter establishes that he gave adequate and proper instruction to the jury as to the principles of law by which to determine whether the plaintiff was a mere guest in the defendant’s automo
After the business before referred to had been transacted, Mrs. Marshall assisted the plaintiff to the rear seat of the automobile and shut the door, but it did not catch; she slammed it and it did catch. She was positive that the door was shut tight. The plaintiff sat on the right hand side of the rear seat. The “whole left hand side of the seat was packed with boxes which covered over one half of the floor, and there were paintings on the left part of the back seat.” The defendant said: “‘We must hurry, we must hurry,’ she had so much to do, she had to be back in Lynnfield at two o’clock.” She drove the vehicle to Everett Avenue and proceeded down that highway toward Everett, behind a street car. The traffic was heavy. In a short time they reached a railroad crossing and the street car stopped. The defendant did not stop her vehicle, but slowed down, and drove around the street car, “cut in front, and got ahead of it.” The railroad crossing was about four hundred feet from the place of the accident. After the defendant passed the street car there was no traffic in front of her vehicle, which she was then operating at a speed of thirty to thirty-five miles an hour. Between the railroad crossing and the scene of the accident the defendant turned around, spoke to the plaintiff and asked him to sit down; he sat “on the edge of the rear seat” holding on to a strap with his right hand. The vehicle was then travelling on the “car rails that were on
We think that the jury would have been warranted in finding the defendant negligent in operating her vehicle at a speed of thirty to thirty-five miles an hour in violation of the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 17, and in twice diverting her attention from the business of driving, by turning around to speak to the plaintiff in the rear seat, and in driving into the intersection at an excessive rate of speed in violation of law, and without looking to observe the vehicle approaching from the right. Colby v. Clough, ante, 52, 55, and cases cited. O’Neill v. McDonald, ante, 256. O’Brien v. Bernoi, 297 Mass. 271, 273.
There was evidence that Mrs. Marshall, the mother of the plaintiff, exercised due care in his behalf and the jury could have found, as did the auditor, that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.
Did the negligence of the defendant have a causal relation to the injuries sustained by the plaintiff? The door
In the light of the facts which the jury could have found, and in the absence of evidence to show that the plaintiff had voluntarily opened the door himself, we think they would be warranted in concluding that the defendant’s negligence bore a causal relation to the plaintiff’s injury. They could rationally infer that like his mother, Mrs. Marshall, he was thrown forward and backward, and that his body came in contact with the lever on the door, causing it to open and the plaintiff to be propelled into the highway. See Jude v. Jude, 199 Minn. 217. Although the whole evidence may not point out the precise way in which the accident happened, it was sufficient to warrant a finding that the defendant’s negligence caused the injury to the plaintiff. Brown v. Daley, 273 Mass. 432, 436, and cases cited. The present case is distinguishable from such cases cited by the defendant as Whalen v. Mutrie, 247 Mass. 316, Withington v. Rome, 258 Mass. 188, Rizzittelli v. Vestine, 246 Mass. 391, and Rogers v. Dalton, 298 Mass. 146, where it was held that negligence cannot be inferred from the mere happening of an accident. The defendant’s exception to the refusal of the judge to give the farmer’s ninth request for a ruling that “The cause of the door opening was pure conjecture” is overruled.
In view of what we have said it is unnecessary to discuss the defendant’s exceptions to the portion of the judge's charge bearing on the question of causal relation of the defendant’s negligent acts to the opening of the door through which the plaintiff was thrown. We have examined the instructions given by the judge to the jury on that subject matter and think that they were sufficiently favorable to the defendant. Exceptions overruled.