340 Mass. 609 | Mass. | 1960
The defendant, recognizing that there was evidence of its negligence, contends that the denial of its motion for a directed verdict was nevertheless error for the reason that the plaintiff was careless as a matter of law. The carelessness asserted is that the plaintiff drove his automobile onto the defendant’s tracks at the Sherman Street grade crossing in North Cambridge into the path of an oncoming train. The accident happened shortly after 7:30 p.m., November 23, 1955, on a misty, rainy evening. The plaintiff on his testimony was homeward bound from his place of employment. As he approached from the north the four track crossing, which he had traversed twice a day for at least five years, he slowed down from twenty miles an hour “to eighteen to fifteen . . . and on down until he got to the track.” He had lowered the left front window and heard no sound of a train. The automatic crossing gates were up and the lights, which are on when the gates are down, were off. He stopped the automobile about five and one half feet from the gate at a point where his view to the left, in an easterly direction, was limited by bushes to 150 to 200 feet. He stopped “maybe half a minute.” He looked first to his right “where he could see quite a ways down.” He then looked to the left and as “it looked all right ... he went on.” When the front of his automobile reached the first track, going at two to four miles an hour, he looked to the right and to the left, in which direction “he could see the
We assume that the defendant is right that when the plaintiff was crossing the first track his view of the straight track to the left could not have been obscured by bushes or a fence and that this part of his testimony is not credible. We assume also, as the defendant contends, that the plaintiff when crossing the first track “had an unobstructed viewr for a considerable distance to his left on the westbound main line.” An exhibit shows a straight track easterly for about half a mile to a point beyond Walden Street and short of the Cambridge station. With these assumptions, however, the conclusion is not required either that the plaintiff did not look to the east when he had an unobstructed view or that, if he did so and was attentive, he must have seen and heard the approaching train. The jury could have believed that the plaintiff did look to the east while crossing the first track; that his view was unobstructed; and that the light of the train was not then near enough on this rainy, misty
We rule that the defendant has not proved that as a matter of law the plaintiff did not “proceed over the crossing at such rate of speed and with such care as is reasonable and proper under the circumstances.” G. L. c. 90, § 15, as amended through St. 1951, c. 557. Borden v. New York, N. H. & H. R.R. 339 Mass. 266. The plaintiff was entitled to rely to some extent on the position of the gate and absence of statutory signals. (Ibid., p. 272.) Compare Gilmore v. Boston & Maine R.R. 299 Mass. 303; Fay v. Boston & Maine R.R. 338 Mass. 531.
Exceptions overruled.