This is an action of tort brought by the administrator of the estate of Thomas P. Sweeney to recover for the conscious suffering which Sweeney sustained by reason of an injury received on the night of November 8, 1907, due to the alleged negligence of the defendant’s motorman while operating an electric car on its street railway in Waltham, Mass. In the District Court there was a trial by jury and a verdict for the plaintiff. The case is now here on the defendant’s bill of exceptions, and the errors assigned are; (1) To
The evidence tended to prove that on the evening of November 8, 1907, Sweeney, while in an intoxicated Condition, boarded a street car at Brighton and rode to the corner of Main and Newton streets in Waltham; that on leaving the car at this place he was still greatly under the influence of liquor, and was assisted by an acquaintance from the car to the sidewalk on Newton street, where he was left leaning against a fence, near a white post, and distant about 66 feet from the corner of Newton and Main streets. Sweeney lived on Newton street, but just before being left refused to go to his home. It was then about 20 minutes of 12. Newton street ends at Main street, and the defendant’s car line passes up Néwton street and-into Main street. In the neighborhood of five minutes after Sweeney was left by the white post, he started to cross Newton street, and in doing so tripped and fell across the defendant’s car track, where he lay motionless. After he lay there motionless for about three minutes, a street car was seen to come along, but no one testified to seeing it run over Sweeney. Newton street, in the direction from which the car came, was straight and level for about 200 yards, and the cars on this line stop at the white post. Shortly after the car came along, Sweeney was picked up beside the car track and taken to a hospital by the police, reaching there at 12:30. He had two wounds in his scalp, his chin had a gash in it about an inch and a half long, his left arm was lacerated below the middle of the radius and the ulna, and his left foot, below the ankle, was crushed. There was an arc light at the corner of Newton and Main streets which was lighted the night of the accident. It cast a light down Newton street so that one could see, and be seen, for a distance of about 100 or 150 feet from the corner. The place where the accident happened was in the thickly-settled part of the city, and near its center.
Although the evidence is meager, and not as complete as might be
The charge not having been prejudicial to the defendant, it takes nothing by this exception. Wheeler v. Railroad, 70 N. H. 607, 617, 50 Atl. 103, 54 L. R. A. 955.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed, with costs.