281 Mass. 412 | Mass. | 1933
This is an action of tort against the defendant under the provision of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 15. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict, the motion was denied, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The case is before this court on the exceptions of the defendant duly taken to the denial of the aforesaid motion. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 120.
On the undisputed testimony of witnesses for the plaintiff and defendant the facts in support of the plaintiff’s action are in substance as follows: For fifteen years John Shea, the plaintiff, had worked hauling gravel and sand, and in connection therewith had at times worked under a steam shovel. For “two or three days” or for “two or three weeks, probably” before his accident which occurred on June 18, 1927, he was working in a similar service for the A. A. Wills Contracting Company, which was insured under the workmen’s compensation act. At and before the time of the said accident one Thomas S. Richardson, as trustee for the Elliott land trust, held title, as trustee, to
Prior to June 18, 1927, Richardson had hired the defendant to do some excavating with a steam shovel on the land he was developing, and had also hired some teams from the A. A. Wills Contracting Company “to carry the material away from the steam shovel . . . the material was dirt, rock and stone — everything that was taken out.” Shea testified, in substance, that “he backed his team to a position where he thought it would come under the shovel when it swung around,” and the operator of the shovel then dipped his shovel to pick up a load; that just before the accident, he was sitting on his cart seat facing half to the right toward his horses, waiting for the shovel to pick up a load and dump it into his cart; that the beam of the shovel was fifteen feet long; that when the shovel was lifted and swung around it was swung at about five feet above his head and over the cart; that immediately preceding the accident the shovel was loaded, and swung around over the middle of the cart; that it stopped with a jar and a stone weighing over one hundred pounds came out of the bucket before the load was dumped, came down, struck the tip cart and then struck him on the right hand side of the spine; “that the stone came out, over the top, immediately upon the stopping of the shovel; that he fainted and was taken first to a doctor, then to a hospital.” He further testified “that he had seen the kind of material that this steam shovel was digging up; that he was familiar
The operator of the steam shovel testified, in substance, that he saw the stone when it fell out; that the position of the plaintiff’s cart was a satisfactory one for dumping; that there was a jar or jerk when the shovel came to a stop; that it was pretty hard to stop a big machine like the one in use which weighed twenty-eight tons without any jar at all, but in the instant case the jar or jerk was no more than ordinary; that his job was to pull the cord which emptied the bucket. He further stated: “when we are working around teams you have to be careful because we have to have in mind that jerks and jars may throw rocks on people below and we have to safeguard yourself against that because there is a small body on small teams; that they have no opportunity to look into the bucket and that they take it [move it] as easy as possible.” There is no evidence in the record to the effect that the beam and shovel were moved from the plac.e of loading to the place of discharge at the cart as respects jerks and jars in other than the usual and ordinary manner.
On the above facts taken in their aspect most favorable to the plaintiff’s case, it is plain that the principle of res ipso loquitur is not applicable. The plaintiff from long experi
So ordered.