234 Mass. 566 | Mass. | 1920
The evidence warranted a finding that the decedent, who was a solicitor and collector in the employ of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, on the evening of January 2, 1919, left his home on Harvard Avenue, Dorchester, intending to take a surface car, running to Dudley Street, at a white post opposite Harvard Avenue on Washington Street; that the car had passed the white post without stopping before he had an opportunity to board it; that he then ran from Harvard Avenue diagonally across Washington Street in the direction of the car; that the next stop was at Norwell Street, five hundred feet beyond; that he was on his way to take the car at Norwell Street; that he was struck by the front left hand fender, as he ran by the side of the car in the space between the outbound and inbound rails; that he fell on the left hand corner of the car, and died the following morning.
The immediate reason pf his leaving home to take the street car was to make certain collections and to solicit some “ordinary insurance” which his superior officer desired him to obtain that day. His employment compelled him “to make use of the public streets and to ride in street cars to call on prospective purchasers of new insurance” and to make collections on his route. Upon the facts the insurer contends that the hazards of the street in their relation to the employment of the decedent are hazards common to persons engaged in any employment who have occasion to travel along the streets and are not a causative danger peculiar
In the case at bar, the workman, to do the work of his employment, must continually stand in danger of receiving an injury from accidents resulting from exposure to whatever risks and hazards are commonly attendant on the use of public streets and conveyances, which risks to him are greater because more constant than those that are incidental to the occasional and casual use of such streets by persons who use them in the ordinary way. We are of opinion that the risk and hazard of the decedent’s employment were not too remote in their causative relation to the employment; and that the case is governed by Keaney’s Case, supra, and similar cases, and is distinguishable from Hewitt’s Case, sufra, and from Donohue’s Case, sufra.
Decree affirmed.