278 Mass. 5 | Mass. | 1931
The plaintiff was injured and his bicycle was damaged in a collision with an automobile driven by the defendant. Upon conflicting evidence it could be found
The defendant testified that he did not see the plaintiff at any time before the collision; that he drove slowly out of the driveway to cross a low gutter and turn to drive along Pond Street in the direction from which the plaintiff came; that until he reached the inside edge of the sidewalk he could not see along Pond Street in that direction because of a high board fence; that he looked along Pond Street in that direction when he reached a point where it was possible, but saw no one. Jurors who believed the plaintiff’s story could properly find the defendant careless in failing to see a man on a bicycle close at hand, and in failing to check his speed until the traveller had passed in safety.
The condition of the automobile and of the bicycle tended strongly to show that the plaintiff hit the automobile after the driver had passed him either on the sidewalk or on the roadway; and cast doubt on the plaintiff’s account. What was to be taken as true and what inferences were to be drawn were, however, for the jury. No horn or other signal of approach was given by either party. The plaintiff cannot complain of the defendant’s failure in this respect for
The judge was right in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant. The only exception claimed is to this refusal.
Exception overruled.