182 Mass. 337 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action of tort by the administrator of the estate of Louise Raymond. The declaration as amended contains six counts. The first four are under the Pub. Sts. c. 112, §§ 212, 213, for failure to give the statutory signals, and for maintaining an incompetent flagman at the place where the accident happened. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant on these counts; and as the case is before us only on the defendant’s exceptions, we are not called upon to consider the questions which have been argued on these counts.
The fifth count is brought to recover for the conscious suffering of the intestate, and the sixth count to recover for the death of the intestate. The first count is at common law, and the second is under the Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 212. In each count it is alleged that the tracks of the defendant cross at grade a certain highway or public street in Worcester, and that on January
We do not find anything in the evidence to sustain the last allegation of the declaration that the barrier extended from the north to the south side of the crossing. On the contrary, as the plan of the location was explained to us by the counsel at the argument, and as the photographs in the case show, the barrier covered only a part of the street.
While the briefs of the counsel on either side cover many points, there is only one which we need to consider, and this is the question whether there was any evidence that the intestate was in the exercise of due care.
As to this question, the eighth request for instructions is as follows: “ If the plaintiff’s intestate did not look in the direction from which the train was coming, which struck her when she reached a point where she could have seen it, then she cannot recover.” We are of opinion that this instruction should have been given. The tracks of the defendant, at the place of the injury, run north and south, and are four in number. The alleged barrier consisted of a fence placed in front of an excavation to keep persons from falling in. The excavation was on the east side of the tracks and the nearest point of the barrier to the most easterly rail was three and fifty-six one hundredths feet, and the distance widened out to six feet and four inches. The evidence at the trial was contradictory on the point whether the intestate crossed the tracks diagonally and came to the barrier at its northerly end, where there was the least distance between the barrier and the easterly track, or whether she came to the barrier at its southerly end, and walked along it until she came to the northerly end, where she was struck by a train going north. We must assume, in favor of the plaintiff, that she crossed diagonally, and so, although she was not on the tracks at the time of the injury, she was in a place so confined that she could not get round the barrier in time to escape injury.
Exceptions sustained.