163 Mass. 484 | Mass. | 1895
This is an action of tort for personal injuries, originally brought against the Connecticut River Railroad Company, the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company, and the Boston and Maine Railroad. The plaintiff discontinued as to the Connecticut River Railroad Company; the court, after the evidence was all in, directed a verdict in favor of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company, and submitted the case against the Boston and Maine Railroad to the jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiff. Main Street in Northampton runs nearly east and west, and is crossed at grade by the tracks of the Boston and Maine Railroad and the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company, which run nearly north and south. There are two gates, one on the east side of all the tracks, and one on the west side. The distance between them is eighty-four feet. The gates are raised and lowered by means of a wheel in the gatehouse by a gateman employed and paid by the Boston and Maine Railroad, one half of whose wages is paid to that company by the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company. The plaintiff, with his wife, was driving in a buggy on the street across these tracks when the gates were lowered by the gateman and the buggy shut in between the gates, where it was hit by a train of the Boston and Maine Railroad, running on one of its tracks. The exceptions are by the Boston and Maine Railroad.
The first exception is to the ruling of the court directing a verdict in favor of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company. We do not think that this ruling is open to exception on the part of the Boston and Maine Railroad. No question of liability of one of these railroad companies to the other was being tried, and no issue of this kind was raised by
The next exception is to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in favor of the Boston and Maine Railroad. There was evidence for the jury that when the plaintiff entered upon the crossing the gates were up; that he looked both ways; that there was no sound of any whistle, and some evidence that no bell was heard; and that the first notice he had of any danger was when the gates began to be let down after he was part way across the tracks; that he got across all the tracks and cried out, “ For God’s sake raise the gate ” ; that the gate-keeper did not raise it; that he turned his horse and buggy to the north on the space between the easternmost track and the gate, when the train went by and hit the hind wheel of the buggy next the track; and that he was either thrown out or he jumped out. This was, we think, some evidence for the jury of due care on the part of the plaintiff and of negligence on the part of the gate-keeper, who was the servant of the defendant. Merrigan v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 154 Mass. 189. Brow v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 157 Mass. 399.
The next request is as follows: “ That for mere risk, peril, mental suffering, and fright, and their consequences, the defendant was not responsible if there was no physical or bodily injury; which the court declined to give, subject to exception.” The ruling given was, “ that for mere fright or risk the law allows no recovery; but the plaintiff says that here was some
The defendant criticises the phrase “ tortious act,” as used by the court in this ruling. We think that the meaning of this phrase in the connection in which it is used is, that if the defendant’s train struck the carriage of the plaintiff, and he was thereby thrown out upon the ground, this would be a tortious act if occasioned by the defendant’s negligence, and that if this act resulted in injury to the plaintiff, the defendant would be liable if the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, and that in estimating the damages the jury might take into account not only the physical injury but also the fright and nervous shock. This ruling, we think, was either correct, or sufficiently favorable to the defendant. It is a physical injury to the person to be thrown out of a wagon, or to be compelled to jump out, even although the harm done consists mainly of nervous shock. See Canning v. Williamstown, 1 Cush. 451; Victorian Railway Commissioners v. Coultas, 13 App. Cas. 222; Bell v. Great Northern Railway, 26 L. R. Ir. 428; Seger v. Barkhamstead, 22 Conn. 290.
The next request and ruling to which the defendant took exception is as follows: “ Defendant also requested the court to
Whether, if the plaintiff saw the gates descending when he drove under them and upon the track, he would not be held voluntarily to have taken the risk, is a question upon which we need not express an opinion. But if the gates were “about to descend,” it might be important to know how soon they would descend, and what the occasion was of their descending. The request does not assume that the plaintiff knew that the gates were descending or were about to descend, but that he either knew or might by the exercise of reasonable care have known this. The doctrine of the assumption of the risk, as distinguished from the doctrine of reasonable care in an action between persons not master and servant or not having relations by contract with each other, we think, must be confined to cases where the plaintiff knew and appreciated the danger and voluntarily put himself in the way of it. The request of the defendant in the present case is not made on this assumption; and this exception must be overruled, Illingsworth v. Boston Electric Light Co. 161 Mass. 583.
By a stipulation signed by the parties, with the approval of the presiding justice, it appears that the exceptions do not set forth all the evidence upon the extent of the injury to the plaintiff. It must be assumed that there was some evidence that the plaintiff was prevented by his injury from attending to his business in the usual manner. It is agreed “ that there was evidence in the case tending to show that the plaintiff had received a severe shock to his nervous system by the accident complained of, and that at the time of the trial he was still suffering from nervous prostration brought about by the said accident.” We see no error in the instructions given, and as the exceptions do not set out all the evidence of the nature and extent of the