196 Mass. 69 | Mass. | 1907
The female plaintiff, whom we shall speak of as the plaintiff, stumbled, in the act of leaving the car, over a bag or satchel which another passenger had placed upon the floor, and pitched forward, striking her head against the door and receiving the injuries complained of. The plaintiff was seated near the middle of the car, and the jury found, in answer to a question submitted to them by the presiding judge, that the car was of the ordinary street passenger car type with a seat running lengthwise of the car on each side. The jury also found in answer to questions specially submitted to them by the presiding judge that the accident was not caused by the conductor’s negligence, and that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care, and returned general verdicts for the defendant. The cases are here on exceptions by the plaintiff to the admission and exclusion of evidence, to the refusal to give certain rulings that were requested, and to certain instructions that were given.
The answers of the jury to the questions that were submitted to them were in the nature of special findings. Ellis v. Block, 187 Mass. 408, 414, Spurr v. Shelburne, 131 Mass. 429, Mair v. Bassett, 117 Mass. 356, and if there was evidence warranting a finding that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant or that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care and there was no error in respect to the issue on which the finding was warranted in the rulings or instructions on the admission or exclusion of evidence, then the verdict must stand even though there may have been error in respect to the other branch of the case.
We think that there was evidence warranting the finding that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant, and we see no error in regard to the instructions or the refusals or in the admission or exclusion of evidence relating thereto. Considering the character and description of the car it could not be ruled as matter of law that it was negligent for the conductor to suffer the bag to be put and to remain on the floor, and the jury must have found under the instructions of the court that it was
In view of the conclusion to which we have come on this branch of the case it is unnecessary to consider whether there was any error in the rulings or instructions in relation to the plaintiff’s due care.
In the rule that was offered there was nothing which forbade passengers to take hand bags or satchels into the cars and deposit them on the floor, and it was therefore rightly excluded.
Evidence that it was customary not to have racks for baggage or parcels in street cars, and that there was a custom allowing passengers to put hand baggage and dress suit cases on the floor was admissible not for the purpose of proving a custom as such but as bearing upon the question whether the defendant exercised the degree of care required of it. Cass v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 14 Allen, 448, 450. Maynard v. Buck, 100 Mass. 40. Lane v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 112 Mass. 455,463. It would not follow that, if the defendant did as others did, it was necessarily exercising the degree of care required of it. The ordinary methods might be careless and therefore furnish no excuse. It is not to be presumed, however, that they would be, but rather the contrary. As bearing upon the defendant’s case, we can have no doubt that the plaintiff would be entitled to show, if it was a fact, that it was customary to have racks in street cars for hand baggage and satchels and not to allow passengers to put them on the floor in the aisles. Myers v. Hudson Iron Co. 150 Mass.
The result is that the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.