196 Mass. 24 | Mass. | 1907
A verdict could not have been ordered for the defendant in these cases, and the defendant’s first request was refused rightly.
There was evidence on which the jury could find that the female plaintiff, hereinafter called the plaintiff, was in the exercise of due care. She was sitting in one of the seats designed for
There was also evidence that the car was run at an excessive rate of speed over a somewhat sharp curve on a down grade, and that this caused an unusually severe jolt or lurch of the car, which threw the plaintiff off and caused the injury complained of. It is true that there was much evidence that the car was running only very slowly, and that there was no unusual or extraordinary lurch or jolt, and it may be that this was the weight of the evidence; but the question was for the jury. Spooner v. Old Colony Street Railway, 190 Mass. 132.
Nor ought the defendant’s seventh request to have been given. The criterion of the negligence of the defendant’s servants was not whether they ought to have realized before the accident occurred that the car was likely to lurch more violently and dangerously than was incident to an ordinary operation of cars upon curves in the track, but whether they were running the car at a rate of speed which under the circumstances and at that place involved unnecessary dangers. Moreover, there was evidence that a rule of the defendant limited the rate of speed at a place like the one in question to three miles an hour. If this was so, and if the jury found that this rule was violated, that would be a circumstance to be considered in passing upon the negligence of the defendant’s servants. Stevens v. Boston Elevated Railway, 184 Mass. 476. But this consideration was wholly omitted from the request.
The defendant rightly contends that it is a matter of common knowledge that from inequalities of surface and necessary curves, switches and guard rails, street cars in their ordinary and proper operation frequently and unavoidably lurch or jolt, and that such occurrences must be considered to be “fairly incidental to the mode of travel, and must be held to have been contemplated by
The defendant’s exception to the comments of the judge on the witness Hart called by the defendant raises a more difficult question. The witness was the conductor of the car. He had answered the question as to how much of a swaying or lurch of the car there had been before the plaintiff fell, by saying, “ Well, I should say not more than any of these single truck cars would make.” No objection was made by the plaintiff to this answer; and it seems to us to have been a proper one. It was of course impossible to measure accurately the lurch of the car, or to describe it so as to enable the jury to determine its amount with exactness. It naturally would be described according to the standard of everyday experience. This is one of the many cases in which a witness may state the result of his observation, although it involves in some measure his opinion or judgment. Parker v. Boston & Hingham Steamboat Co. 109 Mass. 449, 451. Commonwealth v. Sturtivant, 117 Mass. 122,133. Commonwealth v. O’Brien, 134 Mass. 198,200. The presiding judge interfered and said: “ That does not answer the question. He comes here to say that. The other man is just the same way. He is not asked that question. ” The defendant excepted to this, and there
There is undoubtedly force in the defendant’s contention; but we do not think that it can be accepted without qualification. Prior to the passage of Gen. Sts. c. 115, § 5, now embodied in R. L. e. 173, § 80, a judge might properly state his opinion as to the weight or effect of the whole or any part of the evidence, if only the comment was fairly made and the question was finally left to be determined by the jury. Porter v. Sullivan,
In this state of the law our present statute was passed, providing that the judge should “ not charge juries with respect to matters of fact,” but might “ state the testimony and the law.” We think it manifest that the word “ charge ” here refers to the final summing up of the case by the judge to the jury, containing his-instructions to them, after the evidence has all been heard and the arguments of counsel concluded. This is the natural import of the word. And it is of some significance that in all the cases which have arisen heretofore under this statute the questions have been raised upon this final summing up by the judge to the jury. See Commonwealth v. Johnson, 188 Mass. 382, 389; Commonwealth v. Flynn, 165 Mass. 153,156; Commonwealth v. Walsh, 162 Mass. 242, 244; Cobb v. Covenant Mutual Benefit Association, 153 Mass. 176, 181; Commonwealth v. Leonard, 140 Mass. 473, 480; Sewall v. Robbins, 139 Mass. 164, 168; Commonwealth v. Brigham, 123 Mass. 248, 250; Commonwealth v. Foran, 110 Mass. 179; Commonwealth v. Barry, 9 Allen, 276; Harrington v. Harrington, 107 Mass. 329. The same construction has been given to this word in other States. In Millard v. Lyons, 25 Wis. 516, it was said that “the word
The Legislature has chosen to impose this restriction upon the judge in charging the jury. It has not carried the prohibition further. We cannot properly extend the rule so as to cover every remark which the judge may make to counsel during the trial, not addressed to the jury, though uttered in their presence and presumably heard by them. We have no right to restrict the ancient power of the court further than the Legislature has seen fit to restrict it, probably having in mind the rule which has been often declared in courts of appeal that it is not for every unguarded expression of a judge that a verdict should be set aside and a new trial ordered. Commonwealth v. Johnson, 137 Mass. 562. Moseley v. Washburn, 165 Mass. 417, 418, and cases there cited. Phillips v. Beene, 16 Ala. 720, 723. Birmingham Ins. Co. v. Pulver, 126 Ill. 329, 340. Chicago City Railway v. McLaughlin, 146 Ill. 353, 359, 360. State v. Gillett, 92 Iowa, 527. State v. Cleary, 97 Iowa, 413.
Although the statement of what had occurred which was made in the charge to the jury, doubtless from the memory of the presiding judge, was not strictly accurate in all respects, yet it left all the questions in dispute, including the credibility of the witnesses, to the jury, with an express caution against any prejudice in weighing the testimony of these particular witnesses. While we do not doubt that this court has power to sustain the exceptions of the aggrieved party in any case where the conduct of the presiding justice has indicated an actual attempt to prejudice the jury either as to the credibility of
Exceptions overruled.