In this action of tort there was evidence of the following. On June 19, 1956, Francis Smith (hereinafter called the plaintiff 1 ), “going on” seven years of age, lived with his family at 11 Columbia Terrace, Cambridge. Columbia Terrace consists of two buildings (accommodating thirty-three families) with a courtyard between. The children of these families often played in the courtyard. From May 15 through October, 1956, the defendant was engaged in repairing the roofs at Columbia Terrace, and in connection with this work its employees kept certain of their equipment and supplies (including four tin barrels of tar) in the courtyard. The defendant’s foreman and “the other workmen knew that there were children playing . . . [in the courtyard] all the time” and that “at some times . . . [they touched] the barrels, the tar and other things.”
On the day of the accident (June 19, 1956) the defend *141 ant’s employees, upon finishing their work for the day, left an axe, which they had used “for opening up the [tar] barrels and chopping up the pitch,” in the courtyard near the barrels. Shortly after the employees had left the courtyard, the plaintiff, with two other boys, started playing “follow the leader.” One of the tar barrels “was down and there was a board on it and they were playing on that.” One of the boys, Gerald O’Leary, picked up an axe which he “got from the ground beside the tar barrel,” and began “chopping at the tar on one side of the barrel.” When Gerald stopped chopping, the plaintiff, who was on the other side of the barrel, put his hand down to get some tar and the axe slipped out of Gerald’s hands and injured the plaintiff’s fingers. That the axe which caused the accident was owned by the defendant is not disputed.
The case was submitted to the jury and verdicts for the plaintiff and his father were returned. The case comes here on the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of its motion for directed verdicts and to a refusal to give a requested instruction.
1. We are of opinion that the jury could have found that the defendant was negligent in leaving the axe where it did, having in mind that it knew, or ought to have known, that children customarily played in the courtyard.
Sojka
v.
Dlugosz,
The defendant argues that the plaintiff was a wrongdoer or trespasser with respect to the defendant’s property at the time he was injured and hence cannot recover. We assume that if the plaintiff came into contact with the axe by reason of a trespass or other wrongful act he could not recover in this action which is based on negligence. See
Carter
v.
Yardley & Co. Ltd.
*143
2. The defendant contends that the judge erred in refusing to instruct the jury in accordance with its tenth request which reads, “The doctrine of attractive nuisance is not recognized under Massachusetts law.” Doubtless as an abstract proposition of law the request was correct, although, so far as we are aware, none of our decisions has ever used the expression “attractive nuisance.”
Daniels
v.
New York & New England R.R.
Exceptions overruled.
Notes
The declaration, also contained a count in which the plaintiff’s father seeks consequential damages.
The jury were instructed that if the plaintiff voluntarily
‘ ‘
participates in the wrongful act of others and is thereby injured, he cannot recover though there may have been negligence on the part of the defendant which contributed to the injury. ’ ’ This language, which was taken almost verbatim from
McGuiness
v.
Butler,
