210 Mass. 371 | Mass. | 1912
The plaintiff, on September 30,1909, at about eight o’clock in the evening, was driving along a highway in the town of Lancaster, when his horse ran against some wires which were stretched across the road, and he was thrown to the ground and sustained the injuries complained of. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the judge
There was ample proof of the plaintiff’s due care, and of negligence on the part of the person engaged in stringing the wires across the highway. The question is whether there was evidence for the jury that the work was being done by the defendant.
The jury would be warranted by the testimony in finding that ’ the work of stringing wires in that neighborhood had been going on for some days; that one Daly, designated by the plaintiff’s counsel, in the questions put by him to the plaintiff, as “ the superintendent of the Fred T. Ley Company,” was around there while the work was being done, instructing the men what to do; that the teams and tool boxes were marked “ Fred T. Ley Construction Co.,” “F. T. Ley Construction Co.,” “Fred T. Ley Company,” “ F. T. Ley,” “ Fred T. Ley,” as witnesses variously testified; and that no teams or tools were there with any indi
Even so construing the report the evidence presented to establish negligence on the part of this defendant was meagre. But with the inferences that justifiably might be drawn therefrom, and not explained or controlled by facts that necessarily would be in the possession of the defendant, we think it was sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to go to the jury. Smith v. Paul Boyton Co. 176 Mass. 217. Norris v. Anthony, 193 Mass. 225. Bagley v. Wonderland Co. 205 Mass. 238.
The declarations of the superintendent, when he came to the plaintiff’s house during his illness, were properly excluded.
In accordance with the report judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $400; and it is
So ordered.
The plaintiff offered to prove that Daly stated to him that he was superintendent for Fred T. Ley & Co., and that that company was doing the work where the plaintiff was injured, and that the statements were made by Daly when he came to the plaintiff’s house during his illness.
Morton, J.