Opinion
January 21, 1907.
February 28, 1907.
Present: KNOWLTON, C.J., MORTON, LORING, BRALEY, SHELDON, JJ.
If a woman after alighting from an electric car goes around the back of it and attempts to cross the parallel track in front of a car which she sees approaching on that track "rather fast" a little more than a car length away, thinking that she has plenty of time to get across and relying on the expectation that the motorman will lessen the speed of the car, and deciding to "chance it," she is not in the exercise of due care, and if she is knocked down by the car she cannot recover from the company operating it for injuries thus caused, even if the motorman was negligent.
TORT for personal injuries from being struck by an incoming electric car of the defendant on Washington Street in Boston after alighting from an outgoing car. Writ dated November 15, 1901.
In the Superior Court the case was tried before Bishop, J. The plaintiff was about sixty years of age. She testified that on May 23, 1901, she was a passenger upon an outbound open car of the defendant and was going to the Pope's Jubilee in the Cathedral on Washington Street; that the car stopped at Union Park Street, the stopping place for the Cathedral, and the plaintiff got off; that she got off on the right hand side and went right around the rear end of the car. She described the accident as follows: "I come round the rear end of the car and stepped into the space between, looked up and saw this car. I came round the rear end of the car and stepped into the space and saw the car a little distance and I thought I had plenty of time to step over. People commenced to screech and scream and I got kind of confused and the next thing I knew the car was right up on me and pitched me."
On cross-examination the plaintiff said that she used to go to the Cathedral frequently and used to go the same way by car; that she was familiar with the way there and the way the cars ran, and that she always used to get off at about the same place, Union Park Street, and then walked across to the Cathedral.
Other evidence is described in the opinion.
At the close of the plaintiff's evidence the judge ruled that the evidence would not warrant a verdict for the plaintiff, and ordered a verdict for the defendant, which was returned by the jury. At the request of the parties he reported the case for determination by this court. If the ruling and direction were right the verdict was to stand; otherwise it was to be set aside and a new trial was to be granted.
H.C. Long, for the plaintiff.
C.F. Choate, Jr., for the defendant, submitted a brief.
It is plain, we think, that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care. She attempted to cross the track in front of a car which was a car length or a little more away and which was coming as she testified "rather fast," and was struck and knocked down before she got across. She testified, amongst other things, as we understand her testimony, that she thought that she had plenty of time to get across, and she relied on the motorman slowing or slackening up and she chanced it. She was familiar with the way cars ran in that locality and there was no exigency which compelled her to cross the track as she attempted to do. She "chanced it" as she testified, and as is evident was the case and as many people do under similar circumstances, and though it may be hard for her, she must take the consequences. Stackpole v. Boston Elevated Railway, 193 Mass. 562. Mathes v. Lowell, Lawrence, Haverhill Street Railway, 177 Mass. 416. It is unnecessary to consider whether there was evidence of negligence on the part of the motorman.
Exceptions overruled.