Commonwealth v. Bleakney

179 N.E. 400, 278 Mass. 198, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 775
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 400 (Commonwealth v. Bleakney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Bleakney, 179 N.E. 400, 278 Mass. 198, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 775 (Mass. 1932).

Opinion

By the Court.

The subjoined opinion was prepared by Mr. Justice Carroll, and was adopted after his death as the opinion of the court.

The defendant was found guilty in the Superior Court of [200]*200violating G. L. c. 90, § 24, as amended by St. 1928, c. 281, § 1. This statute, so far as here material, provides that “Any person who operates a motor vehicle upon any way, or in any place to which the public has a right of access, and who, without stopping and making known his name, residence and the number of his motor vehicle, goes away after knowingly colliding with or otherwise causing injury to any person, shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than two months nor more than two years.”

The offence is alleged to have occurred on North Main Street, Fall River. It happened about thirty minutes after two o’clock on the afternoon of April 29, 1929. North Main Street runs through a thickly settled section, and is a main route from Fall River to Providence, Rhode Island. The center of the street is occupied by two lines of car tracks. The evidence for the Commonwealth was that a Mrs. Holbrook while walking across North Main Street from the easterly side to a street car moving southerly “on the further track” was struck by “the right front mudguard of the defendant’s” motor vehicle; that the defendant was moving slowly in the car tracks “and proceeded two feet after the contact.”

The defendant testified that she was operating her motor vehicle “on the right street car tracks, northerly”; that a street car in front of her came to a full stop; that she stopped her vehicle; that “her engine was still going”; that while waiting for the street car “to go ahead” she noticed Mrs. Holbrook “leave the right hand sidewalk with her arm raised looking upward trying to attract the attention of the motorman on a street car which was going southerly on the opposite track”; that Mrs. Holbrook walked into the side of her automobile; that she at once alighted from her car and spoke to Mrs. Holbrook and walked with her to the sidewalk and asked her, “Do you want my name?” and Mrs. Holbrook said “No”; that the automobiles in the street “were all blowing their horns”; that she then moved her vehicle from the traffic and came “back to where she had left Mrs. Holbrook . . . that . . . [she was] nowhere to be seen.”

[201]*201A witness operating his motor vehicle immediately in the rear of the defendant’s testified that the street car in front of the defendant stopped all traffic; that while the traffic was stopped he saw Mrs. Holbrook crossing the street with her hand raised; that while “walking in that position she came in contact with the right side of the defendant’s automobile which at that time was at a full stop.”

The Commonwealth introduced testimony that the defendant’s motor vehicle was not stopped; that she admitted “she had not stopped; that she did not tell Mrs. Holbrook or any one else who she was . . . that she did not know the law; that she had made a mistake and got herself in bad.”

The defendant asked for certain rulings. They were refused and the defendant excepted. She also excepted to the statements in the charge, in substance: “If there was a collision it made no difference if the defendant’s auto was moving or standing still at the time, provided one party was moving”; “It is a collision if one is in motion and the other at a standstill.”

The significant words in the statute are “knowingly colliding with or otherwise causing injury” to any person. The statute was intended to punish the operator of a motor vehicle who goes away without stopping and making known his name, residence and number of his vehicle, after “knowingly colliding with or otherwise causing injury” to any person.

There was evidence, which the jury could have believed, that the defendant drove away without giving the information required; that she did this when she knew she had collided with and caused injury to Mrs. Holbrook. If the testimony of the defendant and her witness were believed, she was not moving; her motor vehicle was at rest, and Mrs. Holbrook walked against its side.

According to its derivation, the word “collide” means to strike together or come into collision. It has been held that the owner of a vessel at anchor or at her dock may in certain circumstances be held liable for a collision with a vessel in motion. See Burnham v. China Mutual Ins. Co. [202]*202189 Mass. 100, 102. The word “collision” has also been interpreted in automobile insurance cases. See Pred v. Employers Indemnity Corp. 112 Neb. 161; 35 Am. L. R 1003. The defendant’s contention is that if the defendant was not moving and while her motor vehicle was at rest in traffic the foot traveller walked against its side, the defendant was not guilty of the crime of going away after “knowingly colliding” with the traveller.

If the defendant’s automobile was not moving when Mrs. Holbrook walked against it,-there was a collision and the defendant was involved in it. But the words of the statute are not to be construed so as to make a defendant liable to the penalty imposed by the statute, merely because he was involved in a collision and went away without stopping and making known his name, residence and the number of his motor vehicle. It was not intended to punish the driver of a motor vehicle against which, while it is stopped in traffic, another person thoughtlessly or carelessly falls or walks where the position of such motor vehicle is a mere condition and not a cause of the collision. The words are “knowingly colliding.”' As we interpret them, they mean that the defendant was in some way the actor, not a mere passive participant in a- collision, but to some extent causing the collision or actively colliding.

We have not to decide the meaning of the words when both the defendant and the person ■ injured are moving, nor the meaning of the words as applied to a case where the defendant’s vehicle is at rest and some one collides with it, if the defendant in whole or in part was the one colliding, or in any degree contributed to the collision. If the defendant’s testimony were believed a jury could say that she was not the party “colliding” within the meaning of the statute; that her automobile was not moving; that the injured person walked against her car in daylight; that the defendant in no way contributed to the collision nor in any way caused it. It does not seem to us that the legislation was intended to make one who acted as the defendant did, if her evidence were believed, guilty of the crime set out in the statute. It is to be noted that the [203]*203words “knowingly colliding with” are followed in the same clause by the words “or otherwise causing injury to any person,” indicating that, when a defendant is charged with violating the statute, the causing of the injury by the defendant in some degree is contemplated. The use of the word “knowingly” before “colliding” is also of importance. It emphasizes the criminal nature of the act.

The defendant was rightfully upon the highway. She cannot be. convicted unless she was guilty of knowingly colliding with another. The instructions in effect were that it made no difference that the defendant’s vehicle had stopped, if there were “contact and impact between Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.E. 400, 278 Mass. 198, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bleakney-mass-1932.