In this case we conclude that there was no error in the allowance by a Superior Court judge of the Commonwealth’s motion for summary judgment, and the subsequent dismissal of the plaintiff’s complaint. The plaintiff alleged that his intestate, while operating a motorcycle on June 19, 1974, on Old Down Road in the Mount Wachusett State Reservation, suffered consciously and died when he collided with a wire which had been negligently strung across the road as a barrier. Some counts of the complaint claimed recovery based on G. L. c. 81, § 18, which imposes liability on the Commonwealth for defective State highways. Other counts asserted the Commonwealth’s common law liability in tort by reason of the negligent conduct of its employees.
The Commonwealth supported its motion for summary judgment with an affidavit of one Gilbert Bliss who affirmed that he is director of the division of forest and parks in the Department of Environmenal Management of the Commonwealth, and that Old Down Road on June 19, 1974, was not a public road which had been designated by the Department of Public Works as a road for general public use or accepted for such use by the executive head of the Department of Environmental Management, which controlled the Wachusett Reservation. Such designation and acceptance is required before a road in a State
Likewise, there was no error in the allowance of the motion as to the common law counts. In Morash & Sons v. Commonwealth,
The course we follow here is parallel to that which we followed as to charitable immunity. In Colby v. Carney Hosp.,
Judgment affirmed.
