206 Mass. 544 | Mass. | 1910
This is an action of tort for personal injuries to the plaintiff while he was a passenger on an open car of the defendant. In the Superior Court a verdict for the defendant was ordered
It appeared that the plaintiff’s place of employment was on the line of the defendant’s railway between Greendale and Worcester, and that cars running to Greendale from Lincoln Square, Worcester, usually stopped at the “entrance to the works ” to take on and leave passengers. The plaintiff, who was a night-watchman, intended to take a “ Greendale car” and get off at the works, but, not finding one, boarded a car on the night of the accident going to Fitchburg, which unnoticed by him bore a sign “ Express to Greendale.” Upon boarding the car he went into the rear vestibule, where he rode until the car stopped at a railroad crossing to wait until the track was clear, when he passed to the running board where, until he was thrown off and injured, he stood with one hand grasping a stanchion of the car and with the other hand holding a bundle. To stand upon the running board of an open electric car during transportation is not of itself negligence on the part of a passenger, and the issue of the plaintiff’s due care if questioned by the defendant was for the jury. Pomeroy v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 193 Mass. 507.
Under the most favorable interpretation of the plaintiff’s- confused description, as to what afterwards happened, the jury could have found that the car as it came to the crossing slackened speed, stopped, and then passed.over to a “ switch on the curve,” when the speed was increased, and he was “ whipped off the car . . . after it got a little over the switch.” But, there having been no proof of any defect in either the roadbed or the car and its equipment, the plaintiff rests his right of recovery upon the ground that the conductor should have warned him of the danger which might be incurred by remaining on the running board, or that the speed was excessive. The plaintiff could have returned to the vestibule, or could have stepped within the car which does not appear to have been crowded, but, he having remained on the running board, it was not incumbent on the conductor to warn him of the danger to which he might be exposed from jolts or lurches incidental to the ordinary motion of the car when passing over switches, or rounding curves, Rand v. Boston Elevated Railway, 198 Mass. 569, 573. Nolan v. Newton Street Railway, 206 Mass. 384.
If, however, the conductor knew of the plaintiff’s exposed position and ran the car when going over the switch or the curve at such an unreasonably high speed as to cause the plaintiff to lose his grip upon the stanchion and to be whirled off, there was
The ruling that the plaintiff could not recover was right. Byron v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 177 Mass. 303. Hofnauer v. R. H. White Co. 186 Mass. 47, 49.
Exceptions overruled.
By Aiken, C. J.