247 Mass. 104 | Mass. | 1923
The plaintiff’s intestate, Alfred Nadeau, was killed at about 5:10 p.m. on December 1, 1920, by coming in contact with a charged wire maintained by the municipal lighting plant of the defendant. Prior to the accident the wire had parted: one end hung suspended from a tree on the easterly side of Bay Street, and the other lay in the gutter, for approximately twenty feet, concealed by water and dead leaves. Nadeau was on his way home from work. It was dark and raining at the time. He crossed Bay Street, carrying an umbrella over his head; stepped upon the broken wire which was concealed in the gutter; the steel shank of his umbrella came in contact with that portion which hung suspended from the pole; and he fell to the ground, with his feet resting in the gutter in contact with the wire.
The only exception is to the judge’s denial of the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict on the second count, based upon the ground that there was no evidence of conscious suffering on the part of the intestate. It is not
Exceptions overruled.