193 Mass. 225 | Mass. | 1906
The defendants contend that there was contributory negligence upon the part of the grandmother who had the care of the child, that Ely, the driver of the team, was not negligent, and that there was no evidence that at the time of the accident he was acting as the servant of the defendants. Upon each of these three points the case is very close and the evidence such that a finding for the defendants upon each of them might well have been expected.
1. As to the care exercised by the custodian. She testified “ It • was around two o’clock and the child was in my care, and I had an occasion to go to the clothes line to ascertain if I had a few things dry that I needed, and I took the child with me, and it
2. As to the negligence of Bly, the driver of the team.
In view of the broad daylight, the wide, straight street, the evidence as to the presence of children, the absence of any other
3. As to whether at the time of the accident Bly was acting as the servant of the defendants. One West, called by the plaintiff, testified that he had known Bly for years and had done business with him ; that for eight or ten years last past “ Bly was driving teams, taking orders and working for Anthony, Swift and Company,” and that during that time he (the witness) had not known him to work for any one else ; “ that the team Bly drove was marked Anthony, Swift and Company ; . . . that the bills presented to witness for goods sold him were made out in the name of Anthony, Swift and Company; that on the place of business where Bly worked was the name in big letters, Anthony, Swift and Company.” On cross-examination he testified that “ he did not know who Anthony, Swift and Company were, only by the name ; that he did not know who they were ; that he was not positive whether it was Anthony, Swift and Company on the wagon or Swift and Company.” There was further evidence that on the teams used in the business were the words “Anthony, Swift and Company,” and that the blankets were marked in the same way. Indeed it was conceded in the defendants’ brief that there was ample and uncontradicted evidence “ that the party employing the driver [Bly] used the name of Anthony, Swift and Company,” but the defendants contended and introduced evidence tending to show that this name was used by a M.aine corporation called Swift and Company, “as a means of keeping the business of the different branches distinct, 1 to separate the houses. ’ ” It did not appear that the defendant Swift ever was in Fall River, nor that the defendant Anthony was at the place of business except “ once in a while.” The manager of the business testified that Anthony and Swift “ were simply stockholders in the corpora
4. The request that the evidence of the witness Pritchard as to who composed the firm of Anthony, Swift and Company should be stricken out was substantially complied with by the judge. There appears no error in the manner in which the judge dealt with the request of the defendants as to this.
The case was properly submitted to the jury.
Exceptions overruled.
“It was a good sized yard and the gate was usually open.”
The plaintiff’s grandmother described it as “ the big meat wagon.”