273 Mass. 216 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of tort. The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. It comes before this court on the exceptions of the defendant to the denial of the judge to grant a written motion for a directed verdict in its favor, to his refusal to give certain requests for rulings, and to certain.portions of the charge.
The evidence in its most favorable aspect for the plaintiff warranted the jury in finding that the facts were as
On the foregoing facts it is the contention of the defendant that a verdict should have been directed in its favor because, as it alleges, the plaintiff, in passing through the cars to the place where the accident occurred, disregarded seats in the smoking car and the next car and without any “ necessity or propriety ” went forward into the vestibule where the unprotected plates exposed a person passing over the platform to unusual and unnecessary danger of injury. This contention would find support, passing the admitted fact that the train was a vestibule train, in Hickey v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 14 Allen, 429, 433, in Locke v. Director General of Railroads, 241 Mass. 284, and in many intermediate cases, cited in the defendant’s brief, if the jury were not warranted in finding on the evidence that the plaintiff when injured was in the act of walking through the vestibule, and was not “ standing on the platform between the cars, with a newspaper in front of him, smoking and leaning against the vestibule plate just where the buffers come together,” as the defendant contends was the fact upon the testimony of its conductor. The issue of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence or of his assumption of risk, which arose on disputed testimony for the plaintiff and defendant, was for the jury under proper instructions. Upon this issue the judge instructed the jury, without exception by either party, as follows: “ One more thing, it has been suggested here that this plaintiff was upon that platform not for the purpose of passing through from one car to another, but that he was reading a paper, possibly smoking a cigarette. If you are satisfied that is the fact he cannot recover against this defendant, and I will say that as a matter of law, whether there was any rule posted as to which he had knowledge or not,”
Exceptions overruled.