Court Opinion

ID: 6430281
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:07:35.355218+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:09.804976
License: Public Domain

Loring, J.
The plaintiff in this case boarded the defendant’s car at the Norfolk Street terminus of its Dorchester route. He took his stand on the rear platform. Some six or seven hundred feet from the terminus there is a curve in Norfolk Street, with ■a radius of about one hundred and seventy-five feet. As the car in question went around this curve, the plaintiff was thrown or fell into the street, and this action is brought to recover compensation for that injury.
The evidence was conflicting as to the speed of the car as it entered on and went around this curve. There was evidence that the plaintiff was intoxicated.
A witness called by the defendant was allowed to testify that the plaintiff’s sister in law told him immediately after the acci*596dent that the plaintiff “had been suffering from rheumatism, which accounted for his unsteadiness on his feet.” This was admitted as a statement in contradiction of testimony previously given by the sister in law, one Mrs. Zamore, who had testified as a witness for the plaintiff, as affecting her credibility. In his charge to the jury the presiding judge said: “And it is for you to say whether the fact of the combination, the drinking of this liquor, the fact of standing upon the rear platform, the fact that he was in a state of partial lameness by reason of any rheumatism he had suffered from, if you find there was any such fact, is a circumstance to be taken into consideration.”
Before the judge’s charge, the plaintiff presented in writing two requests for rulings, referred to in the bill of exceptions as numbered one and two. After the charge was made, he presented four more requests, referred to in the bill of exceptions as numbered three to six. The statement of the bill of exceptions is: “ The court refused to give any further instructions.” “ To the refusal of the court to give . . . numbers one to six, inclusive, the plaintiff duly excepted.”
There was no evidence in the case that the plaintiff had had rheumatism, and if the plaintiff had stated to the judge what is set forth in the first ruling presented after the charge (being ruling numbered three) and had excepted to that portion of the charge in which the judge assumed that there was such evidence, it would have been his duty to correct it; and, if not corrected, the exception would have had to be sustained. But the plaintiff did not do this, and the question is whether what he did shall be treated as its equivalent. The case differs from both Brick v. Bosworth, 162 Mass. 334, and Quimby v. Jay, 196 Mass. 584.
In Brick v. Bosworth, 162 Mass. 334, as in the case at bar, the plaintiff’s counsel on the conclusion of the charge presented certain rulings to the judge. It is stated in the exceptions in that case”that these rulings were prepared by the plaintiff’s counsel during the delivery of the charge, “because of matter in the charge and the omissions therein.” It is not specified that this was stated to the judge. The judge declined to give any of the rulings. Thereupon the plaintiff excepted to “this refusal to rule as requested and the rulings of the court as made.” It was held that these exceptions should be treated as exceptions to those *597portions of the charge which were at variance with the rulings asked for.
In Quimby v. Jay, 196 Mass. 584, a point was taken for the first time by the plaintiff during the closing arguments of the defendant that a certain contention was not open under the pleadings, and rulings to that effect were then written out and handed to the judge. The judge “ declined to receive them on the ground that they were too late under Rule 48 of the Rules of 1900 [of the Superior Court].” *
In the case at bar the judge was not bound to receive requests for rulings when the rulings here in question were presented. But he was bound, as we have said, to correct errors in his charge. It does not affirmatively appear why he “refused to give any further instructions.” It may be that he thought that they were intended to be (what they purported to be) further instructions, and refused to give them because they were presented too late. In other words, on this bill of exceptions the plaintiff has not made it apparent that the judge accepted the last four requests for rulings although presented too late and then refused to give them because he thought that they were wrong. Under the general rule that the burden is on the plaintiff to show error (see for example Devine v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 159 Mass. 348; Smith v. Jagoe, 172 Mass. 538) this burden was on him, and that burden has not been sustained.
We are also of opinion that the plaintiff has not made it apparent that he brought the fact to the attention of the judge that he was complaining of that portion of the charge which is in fact dealt with in this ruling. Under the rule we have already referred to, the burden was on him to do so in his bill of exceptions, and that burden, in our opinion, he has not sustained.
This disposes of all the rulings presented after the charge was at an end.
There is nothing in the other exceptions argued. The first ■ruling asked for was defective in leaving out the kind of curve which the curve in question was. With this correction the rul*598ing was given. The second ruling would be true if the car had been so crowded that the plaintiff had to stand on the platform, or if the motorman knew that he was on the platform, with the consent of the conductor. The evidence showed that the car was almost empty, and there is no evidence of the second fact.
The exception to the admission of evidence was waived at the argument.

.Exceptions overruled.

 “ All requests for instructions shall be made in writing before the closing arguments unless special leave is given to present further requests "later.”