163 Mass. 39 | Mass. | 1895
The plaintiff and the defendant were on their way in the Maine woods to a hunting camp. The road built for the convenience of lumbermen and hunters was bordered by woods and brush, and there was no reason to expect that any persons were in the vicinity except the party of which the plaintiff and the defendant were members, and which consisted in all of ten persons, two of whom were guides and two teamsters. Two wagons were with them, one for carrying persons chiefly and the other for supplies. The way was long and rough, and the members of the party rode or walked as they chose. There was game in the woods and most of the party when walking carried guns or rifles, and shot at game or at targets. Those who were walking did not always keep together, and at a time when both the plaintiff and the defendant were on foot the plaintiff found himself alone, and sat down in the woods four or five feet away from the nearest wheel rut. While so sitting he was shot by the defendant with a rifle which the latter discharged at a partridge. The defendant was in the road, having fallen behind the plaintiff, and he discharged the rifle at the partridge not knowing that the weapon was pointed toward the plaintiff. There was some conflict of testimony as to the manner in which the party had proceeded along the road, and the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that different members of the party rested along the route, both in the road and off the road in
The principal contention upon the defendant’s brief is that the plaintiff was himself negligent in leaving the road and sitting down to rest by the roadside where he might be shot, and also in not instantly giving warning to the defendant of his presence when he saw the defendant coming upon the road with a rifle, and the defendant contends that a verdict in his favor upon these grounds should have been ordered, and that instructions which he requested based upon the theory of the plaintiff’s want of due care should have been given. But the evidence was conflicting as to whether there were bushes about the place where the plaintiff was sitting when the defendant fired, and the plaintiff testified that when he first saw the defendant approaching he was carrying his rifle and did not appear to be about to shoot, and that on the instant after, upon seeing him raise the weapon, he cried out to him, “ Don’t shoot.” It is very plain that the court could not rule, as matter of law, that the plaintiff was in any respect negligent.
No contention is made that there was not evidence to be submitted to the jury upon the issue of the defendant’s negligence, and no claim is made that the instructions on which the case went to the jury were incorrect. Exceptions overruled.