277 Mass. 341 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of tort in which a verdict was returned for the plaintiff for personal injuries and property damage. Subject to the defendant’s exception the trial judge denied his motion for a directed verdict. The plaintiff’s automobile was not legally registered and the trial judge so ruled without objection and the question to be decided is whether the evidence would warrant a finding of wanton, reckless or wilful misconduct on the part of the defendant. The accident happened soon after noon on a street running between Ashland and Framing-ham in approximately an easterly and westerly direction. On the northerly side of the street was an unused car track which had been partially surfaced over. The travelled part of the way was made of tar or macadam and was about twenty feet in width. Upon the plaintiff’s testimony she was driving her own automobile from Ashland toward Framingham, when she saw a stationary truck ahead of her on the side of the road at her right and nearly opposite this truck she saw the defendant’s automobile which was
The defendant testified that his purpose in backing his automobile was to turn it around so that he might go toward Framingham; that he looked in both directions before starting and nobody was coming; that he then started and as the road was not wide enough so that he could turn and clear the truck, he backed and straightened out his automobile; that he paid no attention to the movements of his car before the time of the crash because he did not see anybody coming; that he backed his car slowly to go toward Framingham and just as he started forward his automobile was hit in the rear by the plaintiff’s automobile when near the center of the hard surface of the street.
It did not appear that any vehicle was in the street in the immediate neighborhood except that of the plaintiff and the truck. From the defendant’s own point of view the stationary truck was a factor for him to consider in deciding how he should move his car in order to go toward Framing-ham. If it be assumed that the plaintiff’s automobile was in sight and should have been seen by the defendant before he started to back, that automobile, according to the plaintiff’s testimony, continued to move until an instant before
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.