231 Mass. 299 | Mass. | 1918
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while a passenger in one of the defendant’s short cars of the older type with the seats running lengthwise. The plaintiff was sitting on the left side at about the middle of the car. While it was stationary at the stop before that at which the plaintiff desired to alight, he started to rise from his seat so as
There is no evidence of negligence on the part of the conductor. It is manifest" from the testimony in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiff that the conductor was doing his duty in the ordinary way, and that there was no reason for him to anticipate that the plaintiff was about to move from his seat. The plaintiff was not in the line of the conductor’s vision. The only way a conductor possibly can avoid an accident like this would be by looking in every direction before making any motion which might bring him in contact with any moving passenger. Even that precaution might not avail, for while the conductor .might be making the final observation, a passenger might move from the direction. first scanned. In the case at bar, it appears that the movements of the passenger and the conductor which resulted' in the injury, began simultaneously. Q It is not reasonably practicable to require a conductor, before performing his ordinary duties, to look on all sides to ascertain whether some change of position by a passenger, not ordinarily to be expected, may result in collision with him.
So far as the defendant is concerned, the record discloses a pure accident arising from the concurrent operation of two independent forces, not avoidable by the exercise of the rational care required of a common carrier respecting its passengers. See, in this connection, Brown v. Kendall, 6 Cush. 292.
Exceptions overruled.