This action of tort, begun by writ dated August 6, 1964, is in two counts. The first count is by the minor plaintiff, through his father and next friend, for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, its agents or servants. The second count is by his father for consequential damages for medical and other expenses. The judge allowed the defendant’s motion for directed verdicts after the plaintiffs’ opening. The case is here on the plaintiffs’ exceptions.
We summarize the evidence proposed in the plaintiffs’ opening. The minor plaintiff, Robert, then six years of age, with two other children went to coast on Hale Street in Boston on January 20, 1960. Robert had never used his sled before. It had no braking apparatus, and only the usual steering lever, which a seated coaster would operate with his feet. Hale Street is a downgrade from south to north. The Boston Traffic Commission had designated it as a street, “which, exclusive of the side-walks thereof, may be used for coasting on sleds and other like vehicles . . . ,” and prohibited the use of motor vehicles on the street. Two signs had been placed at each of both entrances to Hale Street, one reading, “Do Not Enter” and the other, “Cau-* tion — Coasting.” There were also “No Parking” signs on the west side of Hale Street. Reference was also made in the opening to ordinances prohibiting: parking on the west side of Hale Street, parking on a public way unless both wheels nearer the curb are within one foot of the curb, parking in a public way so as not to leave a clear and unobstructed lane at least ten feet wide, and parking in a public way in a manner which obstructs the way.
About 2:30 p.m. on January 20, 1960, one Antonucci, who was an agent of the defendant, and who was familiar with Hale Street and the surrounding area, drove a motor vehicle owned by the defendant onto Hale Street. Antonucci
Robert and his friends began coasting about 3:15 p.m. He had not seen the defendant’s vehicle before starting. He was seated alone on his sled, coasting down Hale Street on the left of the other two boys. When he saw the car, he was unable to stop in time. He was unable to steer to the right because of the other two boys, and the defendant’s vehicle blocked the road on the left. Robert hit the bumper of the car and slid under it.
1. The judge allowed the defendant’s motion for directed verdicts because “The accident was caused by the action of the boy in coasting, intentionally or otherwise, into the automobile.” In ruling on a motion for a directed verdict on the opening, the judge must take all the statements in the opening as true, and in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, and if any reasonable view of the facts and rational inferences therefrom can be deemed sufficient to support the plaintiff’s cause of action, the motion must be denied.
Singarella
v.
Boston,
The question for decision is whether the defendant’s unlawful parking on Hale Street could rightly be found to have been a contributing, efficient cause of the plaintiff’s injury or whether it was merely a condition which made the injury possible.
Newcomb
v.
Boston Protective Dept.
The facts in
Falk
v.
Finkelman,
2. The defendant argues that the directed verdict should be sustained as to count 2 of the declaration, the father’s claim for consequential damages, on the ground that the date of the writ is more than two years after the accident and that the count is therefore barred by the statute of limitations, G. L. c. 260, § 4. This does not appear as the ground for the judge’s ruling. In any event, G. L. c. 231, § 6A, allows a parent who has incurred medical expenses as a result of personal injuries to his minor child to be admitted as a party plaintiff “as long as the . . . minor has pending an action that has not been completely tried . . . even after a separate action by him would be barred.”
King
v.
Solomon,
Exceptions sustained.
