273 Mass. 296 | Mass. | 1930
The defendant’s tracks were located in a public way at the place in question upon a reserved space laid out by the street commissioners of Boston under statutory authority. The plaintiff Helen C. Notaro, hereafter called the plaintiff, was struck by one of the
From this brief statement of the facts it is apparent that the plaintiff placed herself in a position so near to the approaching car that she contributed to her injuries. It has been decided that if a person intending to enter a car upon a public highway stands so near the track that he is struck by the car, he cannot recover; that his own neglect contributes to the injury; that it is his duty to take a position outside the reach of the approaching caí. Neale v. Springfield Street Railway, 189 Mass. 351. See Hurd v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 254 Mass. 204. In Mann v. Boston Elevated Railway, 256 Mass. 236, the same principle was applied when one familiar with the conditions of transportation stood upon the station platform so near the track that he was struck by a car passing through the
Nolan v. Boston Elevated Railway, 271 Mass. 375, relied on by the plaintiffs, is to be distinguished. In that case the plaintiff was on duty as a policeman directing traffic from a traffic box. At some time after he began his work the box, without his knowledge, moved so that it was struck by one of the defendant’s cars. We find nothing in the cases cited by the plaintiffs in conflict with what is here decided.
The verdicts for the defendant were ordered properly. In each case the entry must be
Exceptions overruled.