262 Mass. 539 | Mass. | 1928
In the second of these actions the plaintiff seeks damages for personal injuries; in the first her husband asks for consequential damages. The defendant excepted to the refusal of the judge to order verdicts in its favor. The jury found for the plaintiffs and the cases are reported with an agreement that if the judge was right in submitting the cases to the jury, judgment is to be entered
Susie Weiner, hereinafter called the plaintiff, boarded a one-man vestibule car in Somerville, entering by the front door. The car was crowded and she had to stand taking her position near the front. There was testimony that she had a “good and solid” hold of a strap at the time of the accident and that the car had gone only a short distance from a stop when it swerved her one way and another, stopped suddenly, broke her hold and threw her “headlong into the front vestibule,” causing the injuries complained of. The stop occurred a short distance from the starting place. Under some circumstances a jerk or jolt may be of such an unusual nature, as shown by the effect on passengers in the car, that the testimony describing its effects has been considered evidence of negligence. This principle is illustrated in Warren v. Boston Elevated Railway, 259 Mass. 226, where the car in question stopped so suddenly that it broke the firm hold which the plaintiff had of a railing and threw her five or six feet to the floor with sufficient force to break one of her bones; and again, in Convery v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 252 Mass. 418, where the car started with such violence that, as the plaintiff was walking down the aisle to find a seat, she was thrown a distance of six feet and struck the rear dashboard with such force that her shoulder and arm were injured and her leg was broken. But proof of negligence is the ground upon which the plaintiff is permitted to recover, and the question is whether under all the circumstances the facts tended to prove an unusual and negligent manner of stopping, starting, or operating the car.
In Gollis v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 254 Mass. 157, and in Chandler v. Boston Elevated Railway, 261 Mass. 230, the plaintiff was in the body of the car when it was started and there was no evidence to prove the manner in which the start was made except that there was a jerk or jolt and the plaintiff was thrown to the floor of the car. In neither case was there evidence that at the time of the accident the plaintiff had a firm hold on any part of the car, and the testimony as to its movements was insufficient to
In the case at bar the accident occurred soon after the car left a stopping place. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to show that when the car swerved she looked ahead through the window in front of the motorman, that there was nothing
In each case the entry must be
Judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict.