Court Opinion

ID: 6436399
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:12:52.162928+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:01.024562
License: Public Domain

Jenney, J.
This action is brought by the administrator of the estate of Lester D. Mayhew to recover damages for conscious suffering and death.
While the plaintiff’s intestate was on a wharf leased by the defendant and used by it for the purpose of receiving and discharging passengers and freight, he was struck by the handle of a large truck on which were bags of cement weighing a ton that were being unloaded at high tide from a steamer of the defendant then lying at the wharf. The trucks were operated by employees of the defendant in the course of their employment.
The question first considered being whether there was evidence sufficient to justify the verdict for the plaintiff, it is necessary to state the facts which could have been found by the jury on the somewhat contradictory evidence. The plaintiff’s intestate, who was employed as a truckman, was on the wharf in the course of his work removing from the freight house boxes of merchandise to be delivered by his employer in a town adjoining that in which the wharf was situated. He was a man of considerable experience in such work, having been frequently upon the wharf to deliver and receive freight, and was familiar with the conditions there existing and the manner in which freight was ordinarily *554unloaded and put into the freight house. When hurt, he was standing outside the entrance to the freight house and a short distance therefrom, having just walked through the door carrying a box of freight which he had placed outside preparatory to its removal from the wharf.
The surface of the wharf was not entirely level, there being a descent of about ten inches in a distance of forty-five feet extending from the gangway, where freight was unloaded from the steamer, to the beginning of an inclined plane from the surface of the walk to the freight house doorway. This plane rose six inches in its length of about three feet. It was necessary to make a turn in order to put freight into the building.
The men using the truck were three in number, one at the front, and the other two assisting at the back. The man in front, who held the handles, endeavored to turn into the doorway of the freight house, but did not succeed; one of the handles struck the plaintiff’s intestate, and the truck went up against the doorway, striking the building with force. There was evidence that the men were running, although there was much controversy as to the speed of operation.
The defendant’s written motion for a directed verdict in its favor was denied. Its exception to this ruling raises the fundamental question in the case and the defendant’s requests for rulings numbered 1, 2, and 3 are considered as embraced therein. The defendant contends that it owed no duty to the plaintiff’s- intestate, and that the evidence did not warrant a finding of negligence, but did require a conclusion that the plaintiff failed to exercise due care.
1. The issue of negligence was rightfully submitted to the jury. The evidence that the truck was propelled in such a manner and at such a rate that a known and unavoidable turn was so made that the truck collided with the person standing outside the doorway through which it was necessary for it to pass, and not within what could have been found to be the usual and obvious course of travel, was sufficient to justify a finding for the plaintiff on that issue.
2. The plaintiff’s intestate was rightly on the wharf to receive freight from the defendant and did not stand in the *555position, of a licensee. Wendell v. Baxter, 12 Gray, 494. Griswold v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 213 Mass. 12. Sughrue v. Booth, 231 Mass. 538. His conduct did not constitute such an intelligent choice of a situation known to be dangerous as to require a ruling that he voluntarily or intentionally assumed the risk of the injury and waived the performance of the duty to observe the due care otherwise incumbent on the defendant’s employees. Miner v. Connecticut River Railroad, 153 Mass. 398. Harris v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 211 Mass. 573. Whatever its weight might have been, there was no evidence that the injury was caused by the obvious condition of the premises, Shannon v. Willard, 201 Mass. 377, or by a known and dangerous condition necessarily and commonly arising in the proper and ordinary use of the premises, Silvia v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 203 Mass. 519, 522; and there was evidence that it was caused by negligence in operation of the truck and not by conditions inherent in the nature of the work which as a matter of law were foreseeable. Fitzgerald v. Connecticut River Paper Co. 155 Mass. 155, 158. Shannon v. Willard, supra. The case is not like Goddard v. McIntosh, 161 Mass. 253, or Cole v. L. D. Willcutt & Sons Co. 218 Mass. 71.
3. Even though the plaintiff’s intestate knew the manner of unloading freight and the conditions in which the work was done, he was not as a matter of law negligent in doing as he did. His knowledge of the situation, of the manner of unloading freight, the place in which he stood, and the fact that he was engaged in getting freight while the defendant’s employees were unloading the steamer, did not raise a legal barrier against a finding that he exercised due care. That was a question for the jury.
The exceptions to the refusal to give requests numbered 6, 7, and 8, are not argued, except in so far as they are involved in the questions already discussed. Apparently these requests were properly covered in other respects by the charge, to which no exception was taken. Except as already considered, the exceptions are treated as waived.

Exceptions overruled.