The defendant herein, following a jury verdict of $2,552 for the plaintiff, seeks new trial on a general motion containing the usual allegations. Several exceptions to rulings on evidence were taken during the trial below but they are not pressed here, nor is the allegation of the motion that the damages awarded were excessive. Decision must rest upon determination that the evidence did, or did not, justify jury findings (1) that the servant of the defendant was negligent,
Defendant employed plaintiff to pick a crop of potatoes, to assemble a crew for the purpose, board that crew, and supervise its work, and defendant, by his own labor or that of his regular employees, was to do, and did, the digging, and provide transport for the potatoes from the field to the place of storage. The compensation of plaintiff, which was on a per bushel basis, was to cover the work and board of plaintiff and his crew, and there was no undertaking by the defendant to carry the crew to and from the potato field, although the defendant did send his truck to transport plaintiff and his goods from home to the farm where the work was to be performed.
The accident occurred at the close of the first day’s picking. At that time defendant’s truck was loaded, not quite fully, with approximately 27 barrels of potatoes, and the plaintiff and his crew climbed aboard before it started out of the field. It is not claimed that plaintiff had any work to perform in connection with unloading the potatoes and placing them in storage, but the truck was to proceed along the route which plaintiff would take in going to his living quarters and the work stopped early that the men might fix up their beds and meals. Plaintiff took a position on the right hand side of the truck a few feet back of the cab and stood on a narrow ledge (8 or 9 inches wide) outside the barrels and astride a chain which passed around them about 15 inches above the floor of the truck. The distance traveled to the main highway and along that highway is not entirely clear on the record, and there is a very definite conflict in the evidence as to the speed of the truck during the several parts of the journey — particularly at the turn into the potato house — but it is entirely established that the barrels were not securely and compactly bound in by the chain, that there was a “jerk” when the turn
Consideration must be given to the case within the well established rules (1) that a jury verdict should not be set aside unless it is “clearly and unmistakably wrong,” McNerney v. Inhabitants of East Livermore, 83 Me., 449, 22 A., 372; Searles v. Ross et al., 134 Me., 77, 181 A., 820; Marr v. Hicks, 136 Me., 33, 1 A. (2d), 271; Plante v. Canadian National Railways et al., 138 Me., 215, 23 A. (2d), 814; and (2) that in the absence of exceptions to the charge given to the jury, or to the refusal of particularly requested instructions, it must be assumed that proper charge was given on each and every point necessary to a proper determination of the case. Frye v. Kenney, 136 Me., 112, 3 A. (2d), 433.
Allegation in the declaration is that defendant’s servant was negligently driving the truck at the time of the accident at an excessive and immoderate rate of speed, and that in turning from the public highway into the driveway leading to the defendant’s storehouse, he suddenly shifted the gear lever in an abrupt and jerky manner and negligently caused the truck to be jerked and reduced in speed, by reason whereof the plaintiff was thrown to the ground. Evidence as to speed, both at the point where the accident occurred and during the time when the truck was traveling along the highway, was sharply conflicting, but proof was plenary that there was a jerk at the point of turning and that the plaintiff’s fall from the truck was coincidental with that jerk.
There was considerable evidence in the case, introduced
Defendant relies also upon the declaration of Chief Justice
We cannot hold, as matter of law, that plaintiff’s position in this case, in standing on the narrow ledge of the truck outside the barrels and straddling the chain which passed around them had placed himself so clearly in a position of peril as to bring his case within the rule of foolhardy conduct adverted to in Nelson v. Sanford Mills, supra. The record discloses that he maintained the position while the truck traversed the distance from its point of loading across the potato field and along the main highway, whatever the speed of the truck may have been, until the jerk occurred in making the turn. In Webb, Adm’r. v. Portland & Kennebec Railroad Co., 57 Me., 117, this Court
“whether a certain result was to be attributed to negligence on the one side or rashness on the other, the judgment of the court below was reversed because the judge had withdrawn the case from the jury, and it was held in the House of Lords to be a pure question of fact for the jury.”
It had earlier been decided, in Keith v. Pinkham, 43 Me., 501, 69 Am. Dec., 80, that although a passenger in a stagecoach might properly be held to assume the peculiar risks incurred in riding in an exposed situation outside the coach, he could not be held thereby to have assumed risks “resulting from the negligence of the defendant or those in his employ.” It was there declared, in sustaining the refusal of a requested instruction that would have taken the issue from the jury that the fact that the plaintiff took his position outside “was a circumstance proper for the consideration of the jury in determining whether his negligence contributed in any way to the production of the injury.” This principle underlies in part the rule applicable in cases when a passenger on a street railway car suffers injuries while riding upon the car platform rather than in a seat, Watson v. Portland & Cape Elizabeth Railway Co., 91 Me., 584, 40 A., 699, 44 L. R. A., 157, 64 Am. St. Rep., 268; Blair, Adm’r. v. Lewiston, Augusta and Waterville Street Railway, 110 Me., 235, 85 A., 792. In the latter case Mr. Justice King declared that the issue as to whether the plaintiff’s position constituted such negligence as would bar his recovery was “clearly one that should have been submitted to the jury.”
Additional questions involved in the case might be said to be whether or not the situation of the plaintiff was such, either because of his status as an employee of defendant, or because he was riding on defendant’s truck only by the consent of a servant who had no authority to permit him so to do, that he must be held to have assumed the risk which caused the in
We must give our consideration to the case on the assumption that the members of the jury were properly instructed on this last point as on every other; that their verdict is predicated on findings that defendant’s servant was negligent while plain
otion overruled.