242 Mass. 314 | Mass. | 1922
We perceive no error in the refusal of the judge to give the defendant’s requests, in so far as they were not covered by the instructions, which singled out certain aspects of the evidence for special comment and emphasis; and the two remaining requests, that on all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover, and that there is no evidence “of any negligence of the defendant’s agents or servants,” present the remaining and substantial questions for decision. Hicks v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 164 Mass. 424. Hopkins v. O’Leary, 176 Mass. 258. Commonwealth v. Min Sing, 202 Mass. 121.
The jury would have been warranted in finding that the plaintiff, while in mid afternoon of a day in June, walking through Haymarket Court toward Avery Street in the city of Boston, “looking straight ahead with an unobstructed view to Avery Street . . . heard some one call” him. He thereupon turned to the west side of the alley and stopped where one Purdy was standing on the sidewalk and as he stood in the public way near the sidewalk talking with Purdy a taxicab driven by the defendant’s employee backed into the alley without giving any warning of its approach, struck and knocked him down, backed on to his chest and then was driven away.
It could not have been ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff was careless. It was for the jury to say whether his acts when
The case was properly submitted to the jury and the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.