Court Opinion

ID: 6415307
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:55:43.570317+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:31.654661
License: Public Domain

Chapman, C. J.
The court ruled that upon the plaintiff’s evidence he had not shown that he was in the exercise of due care. The substance of such a ruling is, that the evidence is not sufficient in law to authorize the jury to find the fact.
The report shows that the plaintiff was a servant of the Metropolitan Horse Railroad Company, which was authorized to make and maintain tracks in Causeway Street in Boston. St. 1853, c. 353. Laws & Ordinances of Boston, (ed. 1863) 572. He was engaged in clearing ice from the rails and track, with thirty-five or forty other laborers, and the ice on the track and on the street varied from one to four inches in depth.
*166There can be no doubt that the company had a right to put their tracks in order by removing the ice, and that the plaintiff had a right to labor for them with his pick in doing the work. Thus it appears that he was rightfully there. It is equally true that the defendant had a right to use the street as a traveller with his team ; for the street had not been closed, nor had any notice been given by the proper authorities, or by any person that it was not open to public use.
Each party, being rightfully there, owed certain duties to the other. It is settled that persons who are using a street as trayellers must see to it that they do not carelessly injure other travellers. Spofford v. Harlow, 3 Allen, 176. The same principle must be applicable as between travellers and persons who are rightfully repairing a highway. And it can make no difference whether the laborer is making repairs upon the highway itself, or upon a horse railroad legally existing within its limits.
It appears in this case that the street was forty feet wide. Apparently, then, there was ample room for the defendant to pass without coming into collision with the plaintiff. But this is a question of fact for the jury. The defendant was bound to give reasonable attention to what was before his eyes in the street; and it is for the jury to find whether he would not, by the exercise of reasonable attention, have seen the laborers at work upon the track, even if it was necessary to pass over the place where they were at work; and whether he ought not to have avoided the plaintiff or warned him of bis approach.
The facts that he was upon a loaded wagon, and was driving slowly, and had ample time for observation, and could easily stop his team, — all these are circumstances material to the decision of the question whether he was careless. They also tend to show whether or not the plaintiff was careless in not keeping out of the way. His duty to keep watch for the defendant’s approach was not the same as if he had been at work upon a railroad where the defendant was coming with a locomotive, or as if it were upon descending ground on a highway where a r ail coach was coming down towards him with great speed. And his duty to keep watch for approaching carriages that must *167pass where he was at work might depend upon his position in respect to his fellow-laborers, and upon the width of the street.
But, without going into further particulars, it is sufficient to say that the case presents a variety of circumstances to be considered in connection with each other, and depends partly upon inferences of fact to be drawn from these circumstances; and the court are of opinion that the question whether the plaintiff used due care should have been submitted, under proper instructions, to the jury. See Spofford v. Harlow, ubi supra; Snow v Housatonic Railroad Co. 8 Allen, 441; Meesel v. Lynn & Boston Railroad Co. Ib. 234; Fox v. Sackett, 10 Allen, 535.

Exceptions sustained.