Spofford v. Harlow

85 Mass. 176 | Mass. | 1861

Chapman, J.

At the trial there was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was, at the time of the collision, in violation of the statute which provides that when persons meet each other on a bridge or road, travelling with carriages, sleighs or other vehicles, each person shall seasonably drive his carriage or other vehicle to the right of the middle of the travelled path of such bridge or road, so that their respective carriages or other vehicles may pass each other without interference. The penalty imposed for the offence is $20. And the offending party is declared to be liable for all damages that any party may sustain by reason of the offence. Gen. Sts. c. 77.

The substance of the ruling was that, if the defendant’s driver carelessly and recklessly ran into and injured the plaintiff, the defendant would be liable, notwithstanding the plaintiff was at the time travelling on the left side of the road in violation of this statute; provided the plaintiff and his driver were in the exercise of ordinary care at the time, and if their fault did not contribute at all to the accident.

This ruling was correct; for though the plaintiff was at the time acting in violation of the law, and exposing himself to a penalty for the act, he was not under the necessity of proving it in order to maintain his action. Therefore this case is not of *179the same class with Gregg v. Wyman, 4 Cush. 322, and Way v. Foster, 1 Allen, 408, and other similar cases, where the plaintiff must derive his title to maintain the action from his own breach of the law. But it belongs to the same class with Welch v. Wesson, 6 Gray, 505, where, though the plaintiff is violating the law, his title to the action is independent of his unlawful act. A party may be acting in violation of some particular statute, and still be under the general protection of the law. A third person has no right, merely because he is thus in fault, to run into him and injure him carelessly and recklessly. See also Boardman v. Merrimack Ins. Co. 8 Cush. 586.

It appeared that the plaintiff was riding on the outside rail or fender of his sleigh at the time of the collision ; and the court left it to the jury to find as a question of fact, upon the evidence, whether he was in the exercise of ordinary care in riding thus. The defendant’s counsel excepts to this ruling as- erroneous, and contends that the court should have decided as a matter of law that he was guilty of negligence. The ruling followed the case of Bigelow v. Rutland, 4 Cush. 247, and the court see no reason to doubt its correctness. It is true that where there is no contradictory evidence, and where the facts so fully appear that no inferences of fact remain to be drawn from the evidence, the question of ordinary care becomes a question of law. But this is not such a case. It is said in argument that the omnibus sleighs used in Boston are so constructed that not only the taker of fares but passengers may safely ride outside upon the fender; and that it is customary thus to ride. But of the structure of the sleigh, the custom of passengers, and the exact position of the plaintiff on the fender, the court cannot take judicial notice; and whether the plaintiff used ordinary care appears to have been a question of fact to be determined by inferences to be drawn by the jury from th circumstances proved. Exceptions overruled