296 Mass. 512 | Mass. | 1937
The sole question for decision is whether there was any evidence of gross negligence on the part of the defendant in driving an automobile in which the plaintiff, who was riding as the defendant’s guest, was injured.
The evidence which bears directly upon the defendant’s conduct at the time of the accident places the plaintiff, the defendant and one LaRochelle on the front seat of the defendant’s automobile on Columbus Avenue, in Boston, early on a December morning. It was just beginning to get light, and the street lights were not lighted. Near Ruggles Street the defendant “stepped on the gas” and was going forty to forty-five miles an hour. The plaintiff told him to “take it easy.” LaRochelle told the “plaintiff” [defendant?] to slow down or he (LaRochelle) would get out. The plaintiff said, “Mr. LaRochelle is right.” The defendant “in rather a hostile way” said, “I am driving this car,” and waved his right hand off the wheel. The plaintiff told the defendant to keep his hands on the wheel. “The defendant again said: ‘I am driving this car,’ and was looking around at LaRochelle. At the time he started to take his hands off the wheel the car was going so fast he could not control it. He got his hands back on the wheel, was looking around at LaRochelle; the car went along some distance, when it struck a projection at the curbstone; the car then went up on the sidewalk and struck a post.” The defendant lost control “when he was starting to get his hands off.” After the plaintiff and LaRochelle had spoken to him the defendant got his hands back on the wheel and was looking at LaRochelle. The automobile struck “a projection at the curbstone where it tapered . . . naturally it narrowed right into the curbstone.”
This evidence was sufficient to justify the submission of the case to the jury. It could be found to show negligence
The jury were not required to pass separately upon the various elements which entered into the defendant’s conduct. They could view that conduct as a whole. They were not obliged to treat his acts after he put his hand back on the wheel as separate and distinct from that which had gone before, even though there was some interval of time between his regaining his hold and the crash. They could find that he was still “looking around.” They could treat the evidence as showing a continuous course of grossly negligent conduct which had not wholly come to an end before the accident, but which finally culminated in the accident. Dean v. Bolduc, ante, 15, 17. Bruce v. Johnson, 277 Mass. 273. Connors v. Boland, 282 Mass. 518. Channon v. Lynch, 292 Mass. 316.
Exceptions overruled.