190 Mass. 255 | Mass. | 1906
The plaintiff was a passenger on an open car of the defendant. The car was a long one, and was crowded when he got upon it, and at first he stood upon the running board on the right hand side of the ear. Later he took a position with his back towards the front of the car near the end of the seat which had for its back the partition behind the motorman, with one foot inside the car, and the other hanging over the side of the car. He paid his fare while standing on the running board. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that when the car was about seventy or seventy-five feet from the place where he intended to alight, he signalled to the conductor; as the
On this evidence the defendant asked the presiding judge to rule that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff. The judge refused to do this, and submitted the case to the jury, with instructions not in themselves objected to and not reported. The jury found for the plaintiff, and the case comes before us on the defendant’s exceptions to the refusal of the ruling which it requested.
The defendant also contends that this case is governed by the doctrine of Hall v. Wakefield Stoneham Street Railway, 178 Mass. 98. But the circumstances there considered were very different from those of the case at bar. There the action was brought by a servant against his employer to recover for damages caused by a permanent condition of the employment; this is an action by a passenger against the carrier, and the injury was caused by a pole which had been set up on that very day in such a manner as to be much more dangerous than that which it had replaced. Manifestly the rule of that case cannot be extended to such a case as this.
2. What we have already said is enough to show that this accident properly might be found to be due to the negligence of the defendant. Cummings v. Worcester, Leicester & Spencer Street Railway, ubi supra. Similar questions have been decided in the same way in other courts. See Elliott v. Newport Street Railway, 18 R. I. 707; Hesse v. Meriden Tramway Co. 75 Conn. 571; North Chicago Street Railroad v. Williams, 140 Ill. 275; S. C. 40 Ill. App. 590; West Chicago Street Railroad v.
The ruling requested could not rightly have been given.
Exceptions overruled.