Cook v. Cole

174 N.E. 271, 273 Mass. 557, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1242
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 271 (Cook v. Cole) 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
Cook v. Cole, 174 N.E. 271, 273 Mass. 557, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1242 (Mass. 1931).

Opinion

Field, J.

This is an action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff by reason of the gross negligence of the defendant when the plaintiff, by invitation of the defendant, was riding on a motor truck operated by the defendant. At the close of the plaintiff’s case a verdict for the defendant was directed and the plaintiff excepted.

There was evidence that, on March 16, 1927, the defendant was driving a motor truck loaded with crates of oranges from Somerville to Springfield, that the plaintiff got into the cab of the truck at Leicester, that when he was riding there, sometime between four and five o’clock in the morning, on a State highway in Warren, the truck “shot off the road” to the left and struck a tree, and that the plaintiff was injured. There was no evidence [559]*559that compensation in any form for the transportation of the plaintiff was paid or promised to the defendant, his employer, or the owner of the truck. ,

The plaintiff seeks to bring himself within the rule, well established in this Commonwealth, that the operator of a motor vehicle, by analogy to the liability of a gratuitous bailee, is liable for injuries resulting from his gross negligence to an invited person whom he is transporting gratuitously. Massaletti v. Fitzroy, 228 Mass. 487. Flynn v. Lewis, 231 Mass. 550, 554. Burke v. Cook, 246 Mass. 518, 521. Marcienowski v. Sanders, 252 Mass. 65, 67. Manning v. Simpson, 261 Mass. 494. Rog v. Eltis, 269 Mass. 466. The defendant contends that the evidence did not warrant a finding either (a) that the plaintiff was riding on the truck by invitation of the defendant or (b) that the defendant was guilty of gross negligence.

First. The evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiff was riding on the truck by invitation of the defendant. This finding could have been made on the plaintiff’s testimony that when he was sitting on a .rail outside a lunch cart, in Leicester, the defendant drove a truck alongside the lunch cart and stopped because he thought he knew me. He said ‘ hello ’ and asked me if I were so and so and I said ‘ no,’ and told him that I was going to Hartford, Connecticut. He said he was going as far as Springfield; I could ride along with him. I said all right and I got in the cab and sat down alongside of him.” The plaintiff, who called the defendant as a witness, would not have been bound by the conflicting testimony given by such adverse party even if it had been uncontradicted (Emerson v. Wark, 185 Mass. 427, Phillips v. Eldridge, 221 Mass. 103, 104, Gordon v. Bedard, 265 Mass. 408, 411), and, a fortiori, was not bound by it where, as here, it was contradicted. See Whiteacre v. Boston Elevated Railway, 241 Mass. 163, 165; Newman v. Levinson, 266 Mass. 264, 267. The evidence could be found to show more than mere acquiescence by the defendant in the presence on the truck of a self-invited guest. See West v. Poor, 196 Mass. 183, 185. Furthermore, even if the plaintiff was [560]*560riding on the truck solely for his own purposes, it does not follow necessarily that he was not an invited person within the meaning of the rule. Cases involving the obligation of a landowner to persons going upon the land for their own purposes (see Plummer v. Dill, 156 Mass. 426; Hart v. Cole, 156 Mass. 475; Glaser v. Congregation Kehillath Israel, 263 Mass. 435) are distinguishable because of the difference in the ground of liability, as was pointed out in Massaletti v. Fitzroy, supra, at pages 507-508.

Second. The evidence did not warrant a finding that the defendant was guilty of gross negligence.

The plaintiff’s account of the cause of the accident may be summarized as follows: For five or six hundred feet before the motor truck came to the place of the accident there was no other traffic in the road. There was a curve in the road and the beginning of a down grade three or four hundred yards before the place of the accident was reached and another curve farther on, though there was no evidence of the degree of either curve or of the grade, except the testimony of the defendant that the road was “ very slightly down grade.” The motor truck was travelling about twenty-five (or thirty-five) miles an hour when the beginning of the grade was reached. Its speed increased. When it was travelling thirty-five miles an hour, or more, the plaintiff asked the defendant “ to stop to allow him to leave the truck ” and saw the defendant disconnect the gears so that the truck “ seemed to loll to one side, first to the left and then to the right and then back to the left again.” One hundred feet from the place where the truck left the road it was travelling about thirty-five to forty miles an hour. The plaintiff then “ requested the defendant to let him off the truck as the truck was going too fast. The defendant then said to the plaintiff, ‘ We are all right; you will be all right.’ ” After this conversation the truck shot off the road.” It could have been found from the testimony of other witnesses that the diameter of the trunk of the tree which was struck w$s twelve or fifteen inches, that the “ tree was [561]*561bent down with broken limbs ” and that the front part of the truck was damaged. There was evidence that the truck operated by the defendant was a “ two and one-half ton truck ” “ which was registered for six tons.” The plaintiff testified that the defendant told him that “ the truck was about five hundred pounds overweight, with the load.”

The defendant’s testimony, the whole or part of which might have been disbelieved, was in substance a denial of the truth of most of the testimony of the plaintiff. His explanation of the cause of the accident was that while passing a larger truck, at the rate of twenty miles an hour, on a straight part of the road, his truck was crowded to the left so that the left front wheel got into the gravel and he was unable to turn the truck back into the road before it reached the tree. He testified that the plaintiff, “ who was asleep, had fallen onto the defendant’s shoulder ” and that he “ gave . . . [the plaintiff] a push to the other side of the cab.”

Gross negligence was defined and distinguished from ordinary negligence in Altman v. Aronson, 231 Mass. 588, 591-593. (See Learned v. Hawthorne, 269 Mass. 554, 560-562). It was there pointed out that gross negligence differs in degree rather than in kind from ordinary negligence and is “ materially more want of care than constitutes simple inadvertence ” but need not amount to “such reckless disregard of probable consequences as is equivalent to a wilful and intentional wrong.” Various tests of gross negligence were set forth, but it was added that the “ definition does not possess the exactness of a mathematical demonstration.” Decided cases, however, by the application of the definition to evidence, to some extent have marked the line between ordinary negligence and gross negligence in the operation of motor vehicles.

Tested by the decided cases, the evidence here does not establish gross negligence on.the part of the defendant. The fact, unexplained, that the truck went off the road at the left and struck a tree, did not show gross negligence on the part of the defendant. Burke v. Cook, 246 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 271, 273 Mass. 557, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-cole-mass-1931.