Tuttle v. Connecticut Valley Street Railway Co.

239 Mass. 553 | Mass. | 1921

Crosby, J.

The plaintiff, while a passenger on an electric car of the defendant, was injured by reason of a collision between the car and an automobile truck which was stalled on the highway. The car was proceeding from Amherst westerly toward Northampton, the car track being located on the northerly side of the highway at the place of the collision where the macadam surface of the road was eighteen feet wide. Between the mac- adam and the track there was a space four feet in width covered with sand and fine gravel. The grade of the highway and the track was nearly level, descending to the west about seven and one half inches in one hundred feet. The highway runs practically in a straight line for a long distance east and west of the place of the collision. Just before the accident one Puffer was driving the automobile truck from Northampton easterly toward Amherst; it was loaded with brick and, with the truck, weighed about twelve tons. In passing a team going in the same direction, Puffer turned to the left, and the left rear wheel of the truck slid off the macadam toward the car track and went into the sandy space, and the truck became stalled. He testified that, while cranking his engine, he saw the car approaching with all power on, and, seeing that it did not slow up, he ran up the track toward it about sixty feet and waved his hand; that there was no light on the front end of the car; that he observed no change in its speed, which was twenty-five or thirty miles an hour, and that the collision occurred. The motorman testified that, when he was about a thousand feet away, he saw only one headlight of the truck and observed it all the way to the place of the collision; that when he first saw it he shut off his headlight on meeting an automobile and turned it on again; that when about four hundred feet from the point of the collision he again shut off his headlight as he was approaching the headlight which proved to be on the truck; that in the darkness he saw no obstacle ahead *556of him on the track; that when about fifty feet from the headlight he turned on his headlight again and saw the truck, and that he reversed his power but too late to avoid the collision. He further testified that the only headlight burning on the truck was on the right hand side of the truck and that the location of the light indicated to him “ a vehicle in a proper and safe position on the wrought road;” that he was running his car twenty-five or thirty miles an hour; that with his headlight turned off he could see fifteen or twenty feet ahead of him on the track.

The plaintiff contended that the collision out of which his injuries arose was due to the negligence of the motorman; there was evidence tending to show] that the sharp slope of the highway toward the track was a contributing cause of the accident. The defendant contended that Puffer was negligent in the operation of the truck.

The defendant excepted to the refusal of the presiding judge to give three instructions requested by it, and also excepted to the admission of certain evidence, hereinafter referred to.

It is conceded that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, and that the trial judge gave suitable and full instructions applicable to the case unless those requested and refused should have been given. We are of opinion that the requests were rightly refused.

While it is well settled, as has been argued by counsel for the defendant, that a person is not to be charged with negligence because of a mere error of judgment when he is placed in sudden peril and the circumstances are such as to require speedy decision and action, Lawrence v. Fitchburg & Leominster Street Railway, 201 Mass. 489, 493, yet that doctrine cannot be invoked to release him from a position where he had placed himself through his own negligence. Rundgren v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 201 Mass. 156, 158. The undisputed evidence shows that it was a dark night, and that the motorman was running his car twenty-five or thirty miles an hour. There also was evidence that it was operated in violation of a rule of the defendant which provided that "Whenever cars are being operated with headlight turned off, motormen are directed to so regulate the speed of the car as to be able to stop within the motorman’s range of vision.” The jury could have found that the sudden peril which confronted the motorman when he first saw the truck was due to his violation of this rule; and that if, when his headlight was turned off four *557hundred feet before he reached the place of the accident, he had reduced the speed of the car so that he might have stopped within his range of vision, he could have seen the truck and thereby-avoided the collision. Instead of complying with the rule, he chose to run his car at a high rate of speed in the darkness of the night with his headlights turned off, which prevented him from seeing, as he testified, more than fifteen or twenty feet ahead of him on the track, so that he was unable to see the truck until he reached a point where it was too late to avoid the collision. The jury were properly instructed that a violation of the rule was evidence of negligence. Where a person is confrontéd with sudden peril, he must exercise reasonable care under the circumstances. Tozier v. Haverhill & Amesbury Street Railway, 187 Mass. 179,180. Lawrence v. Fitchburg & Leominster Street Railway, supra. Even if the headlight on the right hand side of the truck was not lighted, it could not have been ruled that the motorman was not negligent; but it was a circumstance to be considered with all the other evidence in determining his conduct. The charge to the jury, including the instruction that If the jury shall . . . find that upon all the evidence the motorman Reardon could not have anticipated the damage in season to avoid it, the plaintiff cannot recover,” was sufficiently favorable to the defendant.

The defendant excepted to the admission of the following question to Puffer and his answer thereto: “Q. When you ran back and waved your hand as you have described to the jury, in your opinion, could the car as it was approaching, assuming that it was going at thirty-five miles an hour, have been stopped before it reached your truck?” “A. I think it could have, if he had noticed me when I started to run back.” This evidence was admissible as it tended to show negligence of the motorman who had previously testified that at the speed he was running it would take a hundred feet to stop a car. The distance within which the car could have been stopped was a material fact and was a proper subject for expert testimony. This witness testified that he had had some experience as a motorman. Whether he was qualified to express an opinion upon the question presented was within the discretion of the judge, and we are unable to say that his action was clearly wrong. Greene v. Corey, 210 Mass. 536, 547.

Exceptions overruled.

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