298 Mass. 282 | Mass. | 1937
This is an action of tort brought by the plaintiff, an infant, through his father and next friend, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in a collision between an automobile truck operated by the defendant and an automobile operated by the plaintiff’s mother. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was two and one half years of age. The evidence showed that Mrs. Spector, a guest, was riding with the plaintiff’s mother in the front seat of the automobile, and was holding the plaintiff in her lap. The case was tried with two other actions for personal injuries arising out of the same collision, one brought by the plaintiff’s mother and the other by Mrs. Spector. The trial judge submitted the question of negligence of both the defendant and the plaintiff’s mother to the jury. The judge instructed the jury in part as follows: “If you should find that the accident was due partly to the negligence of the truck driver and partly to the negligence of the driver of the Buick, then you would find for the defendant in the two cases of Mrs. Tucker and of Robert M. Tucker, the boy, because in those cases the operator cannot recover for an accident in which they are partly to blame themselves, and while the boy had nothing to do with the driving of the car, if the mother was negligent then her negligence would be imputed to the boy, and would have the same effect as if he were chargeable with what is called contributory negligence.” To this portion of the charge the plaintiff excepted. The jury found that both the defendant and the mother of the plaintiff failed to exercise due care, and returned a verdict for the defendant. In the action brought by Mrs. Spector against the defendant the verdict was for the plaintiff.
Manifestly the plaintiff was too young to exercise care
It is contended by the plaintiff, however, that he was in the custody of Mrs. Spector, and that the negligence of his mother is immaterial if Mrs. Spector exercised due care. There is nothing in the record to indicate that this theory of the case was brought to the attention of the judge at the trial. The plaintiff excepted to the instruction that the negligence of his mother would be imputed to him, without specifying any grounds for his exception. If he were proceeding on the theory that he was in the custody of Mrs. Spector, he should have made known his position to the trial judge. Anderson v. Beacon Oil Co. 281 Mass. 108, 110. Sylvia v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 296 Mass. 157, 164, and cases cited. No request was made that the case be submitted to the jury on this theory. For all that appears, the present objection to the charge may be an afterthought conceived subsequently to the rendition of the verdict in favor of Mrs. Spector. If it be assumed that the question has been properly raised, the contention that the plaintiff was in the custody of Mrs. Spector rather than in the custody of his mother is without merit. There was no evidence that the mother relinquished custody of the plaintiff; and the fact that he was sitting in the lap of Mrs. Spector would not in itself indicate such relinquishment, although on somewhat similar facts, it has
The instructions of the trial judge to the jury, in the opinion of a majority of the court, were correct. The entry must be
Exceptions overruled.