290 Mass. 286 | Mass. | 1935
These are two actions of tort, each writ being dated May 9, 1930. They were tried together in the Superior Court to a jury, which found for the defendant in each case.
Shortly stated, the evidence warranted a finding of the following facts: The plaintiff Warren operated an automobile in which the plaintiff Campbell was a passenger on March 26, 1930. At about 2:30 p.m. he was driving on the State road in Billerica, travelling in the direction of Bedford, Massachusetts, and approaching the intersection of Chestnut Road and said State road. Chestnut Road crosses the State road, and is a country dirt road fifteen to twenty feet wide. The State road has a hard asphalt surface, is about twenty-five or thirty feet wide, and approaches Chestnut Road at a gradual decline for about three hundred feet. There was nothing to shut off the view of Chestnut Road as the plaintiffs approached it. The plaintiff Warren was duly licensed to operate the automobile and it was duly registered. He was driving on the right side of the road and when about five or six hundred feet from Chestnut Road he saw a truck approaching the State road, coming down Chest
There was evidence to warrant a finding that Warren could have stopped the automobile in season to have avoided a collision with the defendant, if the facts as to his rate of speed and his distance from the intersection when the defendant entered it were believed. In this state of the evidence Warren was asked on cross-examination, “You were in-
Exceptions sustained.