246 Mass. 391 | Mass. | 1923
This is an action to recover compensation for persona:! injuries received in the late evening of August 16, 1919, on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, by the plaintiff, then eleven years of age, through being struck by an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. There had been a celebration with fireworks earlier in the evening. At
There is nothing in the evidence to support a finding that any negligence of the defendant had causal relation to the plaintiff’s injury. The mere happening of the accident was not evidence to that end. The plaintiff must have come into the pathway of the defendant’s automobile by first passing through a procession of automobiles moving on the same street in the opposite direction. There is nothing to indicate that he could have been seen by the defendant for more than an instant, if at all, before the injury. The case is governed by numerous decisions. Lovett v. Scott, 232 Mass. 541. Nager v. Reid, 240 Mass. 211. Goetze v. Dominick, ante, 310. O’Donnell v. Bay State Street Railway, 226 Mass. 418. Donahue v. Massachusetts Northern Street Railway, 222 Mass. 233. Mercier v. Union Street Railway, 230 Mass. 397, 405. It is distinguishable from
The testimony that no horn was heard just before the accident “ is merely negative and of no value as evidence that it was not sounded.” Gibb v. Hardwick, 241 Mass. 546, 549.
Exceptions overruled.