86 A. 138 | N.H. | 1913
The defendant claims that a verdict in its favor should have been directed because the plaintiff knew a truck was in position to injure him and did nothing to avoid the injury. If this claim were well founded in fact, the legal conclusion might not be erroneous. But the evidence in the case is susceptible of another and very different construction. It could be found that the plaintiff had no reason to believe the truck was still standing close to the train, and that its continued presence there, contrary both to custom and to express orders in the particular instance, was due to the negligence of the defendant's servants.
As the cause of action arose in Massachusetts, the substantial rights of the parties are governed by the law of that state. Kimball v. Kimball,
The cases cited by the witness and offered in evidence by the defendant do not go to the extent of holding that a railroad employee who is upon the steps or side of a moving train in the reasonable performance of his duties is thereby barred from a recovery. In Flansburg v. Company,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred. *586