260 Mass. 110 | Mass. | 1927
The jury would have been warranted on the evidence in finding the following facts. The defendant, who was engaged in carrying on a laundry, used in bis business on December 27, 1923, a horse drawn vehicle. The driver of the team, an employee of the defendant, while passing over a public way, referred to in the record as Broadway in the city of Boston, stopped the team near the curbing on the right hand side of the street, threw the reins on the horse’s rump, and went into a restaurant where he remained less than five minutes. A lad, one William Dwyer, not quite sixteen years of age, also an employee of the defendant, remained on the wagon seat, but “had no duties in connection with the team.” During the absence of the driver, the horse, having been left unhitched, ran violently through the street, and, although Dwyer caught hold of the reins and tried to stop the horse, his efforts were unavailing, and, being without guidance, the team, moving at the rate ..of
It is settled that the defendant and the intestate were lawfully using the public ways under the reciprocal duty of exercising due care in their relations to each other as travel-lers. Hennessey v. Taylor, 189 Mass. 583. The defendant contends, that the intestate’s negligence, which is alleged in the answer, having contributed to his injury and death, the plaintiff cannot recover. G. L. c. 231, § 85.
It was unquestioned, that the intestate used a cane, and that his eyesight had been clouded especially “at the rims” for ten years. While at the hospital, to which he had been removed immediately after the accident, and where he died, the intestate, although conscious at times, could give no account of it, and the only evidence of his movements and conduct appears in the evidence of David Warnock and Mrs. Mary Holt, called by the plaintiff. Warnock testified “that he heard a horse running away out on Broadway going rapidly, in a large lope with a young man trying to check him; that he saw the deceased coming toward him on the crossing of F Street when the deceased was almost across and that the deceased was struck almost at the sidewalk of F Street; that the horse was going about fifteen miles per hour . . .; that he saw the deceased trying to get on the sidewalk just as he was struck; that he helped take the deceased up on the sidewalk and heard him moaning.” Mrs. Holt testified in substance that she watched the intestate “from the time he stepped down from the curbing” to cross over, “until the accident and he went across slowly; that . . . [he] tried to step back after the horse hit him . . . the horse stepped right over him”; he was almost to the curb when he got hit.
The credibility of these witnesses was for the jury. It is argued that the intestate should have heard the noise made by the approaching team. But an uncontrolled team
The evidence also entitled the plaintiff to go to the jury on the issue of the defendant’s negligence. It was unnecessary for the plaintiff to offer evidence that the horse had previously shown a propensity to run wild when harnessed to a vehicle and driven on a public way, and that the defendant knew or should have known of such habit, and there was no evidence as the judge told the jury that the horse was vicious. The horse was neither hitched to any post nor otherwise secured, and there was no person on the seat in charge of the team. It was left at large in the highway without supervision or control. Southworth v. Old Colony & Newport Railway, 105 Mass. 342. Carey v. Milford & Uxbridge Street Railway, 193 Mass. 161. Joyce v. Exeter, Hampton & Amesbury Street Railway, 190 Mass. 304. Flynn v. O’Rior-dan, 211 Mass. 477.
The motion for a directed verdict was denied rightly, and the defendant’s eighth, ninth, eleventh and twelfth requests could not have been given.
The driver, William Hickey, called by the defendant, who testified that he was absent only three or four minutes, was risked whether he was familiar with the rules and regulations
The defendant also excepted to portions of the instructions relating to the plaintiff’s due care. The judge instructed the jury that the due care of the intestate was not to be judged by the standard of care of a man of good hearing and of good eyesight; that all that was required of him was to have exercised the faculties which he possessed; that the care required is not essentially different from the rule applicable to a young child on the street. "If he was negligent, if he ought to have done something different which a man in his physical condition should have done, and if, having done that he could have avoided the accident, then it would have been his duty to do it, and if he did not do it he cannot recover.” These instructions were misleading and erroneous. The jury thereunder well might have found that the physical infirmity of
Exceptions sustained.