250 Mass. 476 | Mass. | 1925
This is an action of tort for personal injuries received by a minor pedestrian, twelve years of age, by reason of a collision with a car of the defendant while the plaintiff was crossing Bowdoin Street in the Dorchester sec
Bowdoin Street rims practically northeast and southwest, and is forty feet wide excluding sidewalks. In the middle of this street were double tracks of the defendant’s railway, the outbound track being nearer the northerly side of the street, where the plaintiff’s home was located at No. 176. Bowdoin Street is nearly straight for a distance of one thousand or twelve hundred feet, with a grade of three feet in the hundred as it passes the plaintiff’s house, the outbound car going down hill and the inbound car travelling up grade. The house where the plaintiff lived is two hundred and fifty feet east of Geneva Avenue and two hundred and seventy-five feet west of Topliff Street, which enters Bowdoin Street on the south but does not cross it. Shepard Street is adjacent to 176 Bowdoin Street and enters but does not cross that street. Opposite Shepard Street on the southerly side of Bowdoin Street is an old-fashioned house. To the east, on the southerly side of the street, is a garage and near the sidewalk in front of the garage is a white post, which is the first stop for an east bound car after leaving Geneva Avenue. Opposite the white post, at Dever Street, is another white post stop on the northerly side of Bowdoin Street and sixty feet east of a point in the sidewalk directly in front of 176 Bowdoin Street. The white post near the garage, the dwelling house opposite Shepard Street, and a point in the sidewalk opposite the entrance to 176 Bowdoin Street, with lines connecting them, form an equilateral triangle with sides eighty feet in length.
No evidence was offered by the plaintiff regarding the speed of the outbound car before it reached the place of the collision; while the evidence of witnesses for the defendant, if believed, warranted a finding that the outbound car stopped at the white post at Dever Street, and after starting had travelled no more than thirty-five feet from a state of rest when the front of the car came in contact with the plaintiff’s body, where it stopped within two feet.
Upon the foregoing evidence it is plain the plaintiff exercised no care for his safety whatsoever as against the perils of the outcoming car. It is obvious the outcoming car was in plain view from the time the plaintiff ran from the sidewalk until he attempted to turn back and away from the path of the inbound car, and in doing so crossed upon the track of the outbound car. Stevens v. Boston Elevated Railway, 250 Mass. 288. Fitzpatrick v. Boston Elevated Railway, 249 Mass. 140. It is equally obvious that there is no evidence to warrant a finding that there was negligence in the operation of the colliding car or in the failure of the motorman of that car to observe the situation of the plaintiff and his peril. It follows in accordance with the terms of the report that judgment is to be entered for the defendant on the verdict: and it is
So ordered.