242 Mass. 383 | Mass. | 1922

Jenney, J.

This action is here upon the defendant’s exception to the refusal of the trial judge to order a verdict in its favor.

The plaintiff, desiring to become a passenger upon a street car of the defendant, entered upon Dorchester Avenue, a public highway in Boston, in which the defendant had two tracks. There had been a heavy fall of snow, and the tracks and the space between them had been cleared by the defendant. The snow was piled in sloping banks, about three feet high close to both outside rails and to a considerably greater height next to the sidewalks. The sidewalks were impassable and pedestrians used the cleared part of the street.

The plaintiff, who was young and active and had two companions, walked down Dorchester Avenue on the outbound track intending to take a car of the defendant at Andrew Square. As she approached Romsey Street, she saw one coming on the inbound track from behind her, and decided to take it if she could do so. At Romsey Street there was a regular stopping place. All started to cross the tracks in front of the inbound car. Her companions crossed and got safely upon the snow bank on the right of the inbound track. The plaintiff after crossing the tracks started up the bank, walking backwards, and continued in that manner, The car came almost to a stop and then increased its speed and as it did so suddenly “bolted ahead” and the front of the car hit the plaintiff below the knee and she fell. As this happened some one caught and held her so that she did not go under the car.

The defendant’s sole contention is that as a matter of law the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care. It argues that had she remained where she was on the outbound track she could have passed by the rear of the car and stepped into the door on its right side after it had come to a standstill and that, instead of acting in this obviously safe manner, she adopted the dangerous course of attempting to climb on the snow bank and did it in such a way as to make her attempt more dangerous than it otherwise would have been. The defendant contends that in so doing she, as a matter of law, was negligent.

In the absence of any argument that the evidence did not warrant a finding of negligence on the part of the motorman, that question is not considered.

The use by the defendant of the parts of the street occupied by *385its tracks was not exclusive. Chaput v. Haverhill, Georgetown & Danvers Street Railway, 194 Mass. 218. Keith v. Worcester & Blackstone Valley Street Railway, 196 Mass. 478. Nelson v. Old Colony Street Railway, 208 Mass. 159. Richardson v. Haverhill & Amesbury Street Railway, 218 Mass. 52.

We think it could not have been ruled as a matter of law that the plaintiff was negligent in attempting to cross in front of the car at, or substantially at, a regular stopping place for the purpose of receiving passengers, instead of waiting until the car had passed and then crossing behind it, even in the light of the existing circumstances; nor that her method of climbing the bank was negligent. These questions were for the jury. Chisholm v. Newton Street Railway, 214 Mass. 281. Maloy v. Boston Elevated Railway, 217 Mass. 108. The jury might have found that the plaintiff could rely upon the stopping of the car to receive passengers and that she would have reached a place of safety if it had not been for the sudden acceleration of its speed. Even if they came to a different conclusion, she could be found to have been in the exercise of due care, although, as it turned out, her judgment as to her course of action was not sound. Hennessey v. Taylor, 189 Mass. 583. The case is distinguishable in the nature of the negligence of the defendant and the action of the plaintiff from Wilson v. Charlestown, 8 Allen, 137, Casey v. Fitchburg, 162 Mass. 321, and Lee v. Boston Elevated Railway, 182 Mass. 454, upon which the defendant relies. See Thompson v. Bolton, 197 Mass. 311.

It follows that the case was properly submitted to the jury and that the exception must be overruled.

So ordered.

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