220 Mass. 210 | Mass. | 1915
The plaintiff’s intestate, Patrick MeGann, was in the employ of the defendant company as the conductor on a car running through the East Boston tunnel. At the Boston terminus there is a single track, called a “dead end.” On the morning of the accident the intestate’s car was the last of three to come into this terminus, and necessarily would be the first to go out; and it was the duty of the motorman and conductor to change ends for the return trip.' While MeGann was adjusting the fender on the rear end of his car as reversed, the car behind him moved ahead and crushed him against his own car. At the trial the plaintiff waived all counts under the employers’ liability act and relied on the common law counts for conscious suffering.
The plaintiff asks us to extend to this case the rule applied in Chiuccariello v. Campbell, 210 Mass. 532, to wit, that from the unexplained starting of a machine in a factory, under circumstances when it ought not to have started at all, the jury could infer not only that there was a defect of some kind in the machine, but that it was due to negligence on the part of the employer. Even if this question arose now for the first time, we should hesitate to say that an electric car, operated on the- highways in all kinds of weather, with frequent changes in the persons handling its mechanism, and driven by a force not yet fully understood, is in the same class with a machine in a factory, under the immediate control and constant supervision of the employer. In substance the plaintiff’s contention is that a jury might find that an electric car "does not ordinarily start automatically without some negligence of omission or commission on the part of the employer, and that the existence of such negligence is the rational explanation of the starting.” Ryan v. Fall River Iron Works Co. 200 Mass. 188, 193. But this question is no longer an open one. It has been held by this court in several cases similar to the one at bar that the mere unexplained starting of a car is not of itself sufficient to show negligence on the part of the employer. Kenneson v. West End Street Railway, 168 Mass. 1. Curtin v. Boston Elevated Railway, 194 Mass. 260. Horne v. Boston Elevated Railway, 206 Mass. 231. Ridge v. Boston Elevated Railway, 213 Mass. 460.
Assuming in favor of the plaintiff that the jury could find that the car started automatically, and that it might be inferred therefrom that the air brake was in a defective condition at the time, there was no evidence that the defendant knew or ought to have known of such defective condition before the plaintiff’s intestate was injured. The car which ran into McGann was on its second trip that morning into the tunnel; and both the motorman and conductor testified that up to the time of the accident they noticed nothing out of the way about the car. There was no
As there was no evidence that the defendant was negligent in failing to discover, and remedy the defect, assuming that there was one, it was entitled to have a verdict entered in its favor. Curtin v. Boston Elevated Railway, 194 Mass. 260. Hill v. Iver Johnson Sporting Goods Co. 188 Mass. 75. Toland v. Paine Furniture Co. 175 Mass. 476.
Exceptions overruled.