269 Mass. 252 | Mass. | 1929
This is an action of tort, brought jointly against the defendants Calcutt and Woodman, to recover for property damage occurring to the plaintiff’s automobile through collision on the Wollaston Boulevard, in Quincy, with an automobile owned by the defendant Calcutt. At the conclusion of the evidence, the defendant Woodman filed a motion that the judge direct a verdict in his favor. The motion was denied subject to his exception. Full and appropriate instructions were given to the jury to which no exception was taken. The jury returned a verdict against both defendants. The trial judge reported the case to this court
On evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, it could have been found that on the day in question the plaintiff’s car, operated by her brother, had followed an automobile owned by the defendant Woodman, and operated by one Tuttle, southerly for half a mile on the boulevard, along the edge of the beach, the ocean being at the left. Under the metropolitan park regulations automobiles were permitted to be parked between the road and the ocean at right angles with the road. The surface of the boulevard was macadam, and was twenty-three feet wide'from the curb at the inland side to the gutter at the water side, with space enough for three cars abreast; it was substantially level for several hundred feet on either side of the place where the accident occurred, and curved slightly to the left in the direction the plaintiff’s car was proceeding. It had been raining, and the surface of the road was wet and slippery. It was Tuttle’s intention to make a left hand turn across the boulevard and park the Woodman car on the beach. Shortly before the accident he gave a hand signal and started to turn, when a third car, proceeding in the same direction at a high rate of speed, "shot” by both cars cutting Tuttle off from the beach; he thereupon slowed down, proceeded about two city blocks, and then .turned off the road to the left without giving another signal. He testified that he crossed the boulevard -and had got his car entirely on to the reservation before he heard the sound of a crash. He further testified that before making the second turn he had a view of the boulevard ahead of him for three or four hundred feet, and saw the Calcutt car coming toward him about two hundred feet away; that he was looking "pretty intently” toward the beach for a parking space. The plaintiff’s brother testified that he knew of Tuttle’s intention to make the turn, and was operating his car with this in mind; that it was not until the turn had been completed that he saw the defendant Oalcutt’s car
The question, whether the driver of the plaintiff’s automobile was negligent was one of fact and was properly submitted to the jury. It could have been found that he was unable to see the Calcutt car by reason of Woodman’s car being in front of him and crossing the road. Cairney v. Cook, 266 Mass. 279, and cases cited.
It could not properly have been ruled that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of Tuttle in failing to give any signal before making the second turn across the road. As the driver of the plaintiff’s car was aware of the intention of Tuttle to cross to the beach, he required no signal for this information, but it could have been found that in the exercise of reasonable care a signal should have been given before Tuttle began to turn sufficiently to call Calcutt’s attention to the fact that the turn was to be made, and that, if Calcutt had heeded such a signal, he could have stopped his car or slowed its speed and thereby have prevented the accident. The giving of such a signal is for the benefit of those who may be in front or behind the driver of a motor vehicle. The fact that the car of Woodman did not collide with the plaintiff’s car is immaterial, if, as could have been found,, the accident was the result in whole or in part of the negligence of Woodman’s driver. Ordinarily where a collision occurs between travellers upon a highway the issues of due care on the part of the plaintiff and of negligence of the defendant are for the jury. Hennessey v. Taylor, 189 Mass. 583, 584. We find nothing in the record in the case at bar to take it out of the general rule. Hennessey v. Taylor, 189 Mass. 583.
In accordance with the terms of the report the entry must be
Judgment on the verdict.