180 Mass. 165 | Mass. | 1901
This is an action for personal injuries caused by being thrown from an express wagon in consequence of a collision with an ice wagon belonging to the defendant. The plaintiff worked by the hour for the Salvation Army, and had been sent with one Marshallen to deliver a ton of coal, Marshallen having charge of the driving and the plaintiff having no other duty than to help in delivering the coal. The coal had been delivered and the wagon was returning, when the accident happened. The plaintiff, it would seem, then was sitting by Marshallen’s side. At the trial the evidence was conflicting as to how the collision occurred and who was to blame. The defendant asked instructions to the effect that if the accident was not due to the negligence of the defendant’s driver alone but was due partly also to the negligence of the plaintiff’s driver, Marshallen, he could not recover. This the judge refused to rule, but did rule that if the plaintiff “ trusted to Marshallen the sole care and management of the team in which they were riding, and relied solely on the care and vigilance of Marshallen,” then he must show due care on Marshallen’s part. The defendant excepted.
It will be seen that the judge did not go with the plaintiff to the point of declaring that Marshallen’s negligence was immaterial in any event. On the other hand he declined to follow Thorogood v. Bryan, 8 C. B. 115, so far as to assert the absolute identification of the plaintiff with the driver for the purposes of recovery in this case. On the latter point the judge was justified by Randolph v. O'Riordon, 155 Mass. 331, and the cases which it cites at p. 337. But it is suggested that the case at bar is like Allyn v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 105 Mass. 77, 79, which is recognized, or at least is not overruled in terms, by Randolph v. O'Riordon, and therefore that the instruction requested should have been given. The answer is that it was given, subject to the jury’s finding that facts like those in the Allyn case were true.
If there were no decisions upon the matter, the ruling requested for the defendant would have to be considered from a different point of view which might present more trouble. For it might be argued that if the accident would not have happened but for the negligence of a person for whose conduct the defendant was not responsible, the defendant could not be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury, to use the phrase
Some criticism is made upon the charge upon points not open. On the whole we are of opinion that the defendant has no cause to complain.
Exceptions overruled.