Court Opinion

ID: 6441196
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:17:12.478499+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:35.075029
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C.J.
The plaintiff seeks in this action of tort to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained as a result of a fall on the concourse of the defendant. There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff, having arrived in the South Station on a train, was walking across the concourse toward the waiting room, and met a man with a long-handled brush "sweeping very fast, doing his *518work as fast as he could”; that something from the brush came right toward her and under her feet and she fell; that one or two coming from the other direction stepped over it; that the piece that went under her feet was about half the size of the palm of her hand and was of a “lightish” color, as thick as an inch or as thick as the palm of her hand; that she was about eleven feet away from the man with the broom;, that the object “slid from the sweeping” and was something heavy. There was evidence to justify the jury in finding that the sweeper was in the employ of the defendant, and at the time of the accident was acting within the scope of his employment and was engaged in the defendant’s business. There was evidence' also that the plaintiff sustained serious injuries as the result of the accident.
It cannot be said as matter of law that there was error in the denial of the defendant’s request for a directed verdict in its favor. It has not been contended that the defendant did not owe to the plaintiff the duty of exercising ordinary care toward her as an invitee. Moreland v. Boston & Providence Railroad, 141 Mass. 31. Frazier v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 180 Mass. 427. Hunt v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 212 Mass. 102. The employee of the defendant might have been found negligent in not seeing and removing from the floor an object of the size, weight and nature described in the testimony, and in brushing it along the floor with the force described. The case is distinguishable from cases like Goddard v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 179 Mass. 52, Lyons v. Boston Elevated Railway, 204 Mass. 227, and Mascary v. Boston Elevated Railway, 258 Mass. 524, where it did not appear that the object which caused the injury had or ought to have been observed by the servants of the defendant.

Exceptions overruled.