276 Mass. 82 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff while a passenger on a motor bus of the defendant. The declaration alleges negligent operation of the bus by its agent or employee. The jury found for the plaintiff and the case comes to this court upon the defendant’s exception to the refusal of the judge to direct a verdict in its favor.
The plaintiff testified that the bus stopped at Union Square and “just as I got in, there is a little platform there, and there [are] two steps right as you turn around to get up. I got on the platform and got up; and there was one seat, there was a lady sitting in the first seat here; and I took hold of that handlebar, just went to raise my foot up, and the bus started and it broke my grip on this handlebar and threw me right around against the handle of the second seat, threw my bundles in the seat, and I landed in the — the lady in front of me.” She also testified that the doors of the bus did not close for two stops after it left the place where she got on; that it seemed to start “with a leap, a sudden jump”; that “after the accident she noticed her side was black and blue,' just like a mark of bruised blood, where she had been hurt by the handle of the seat.” In cross-examination she testified that she had a bundle in her right hand; that she did not fall to the floor; that she came in contact with the second seat although the lady she referred to was in the first seat; that she was on the platform or main floor of the bus, but when the bus started she had one foot on the platform and was just going to raise the other one; that she was then close to the second seat and that the driver knew nothing about the accident. The defendant offered no evidence except on damages.
In the absence of proof of special circumstances a street railway company may start a street car which has stopped to take on passengers as soon as all are fully and fairly within it. Sauvan v. Citizens’ Electric Street Railway, 197 Mass. 176. Seidenberg v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 266 Mass. 540, 542. Boston Elevated Railway v. Smith, 168 Fed. Rep. 628.
The plaintiff’s testimony that her grip was broken could
Exceptions overruled.