Dobbert v. Robare

21 Mass. App. Dec. 1

This text of 21 Mass. App. Dec. 1 (Dobbert v. Robare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobbert v. Robare, 21 Mass. App. Dec. 1 (Mass. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Hobson, J.

This is an action of tort in which the plaintiff seeks to recover for damage to her automobile, caused by a collision involving her automobile, operated by her son Robert, and an automobile owned by the defendant, Edith C. Robare, operated by her son.

On all the pertinent evidence, some of which was conflicting, the trial judge wárrantably found the following facts:

"On March 2, 1955, the plaintiff was the owner of an 1947 two door Ford sedan automobile,- which [3]*3was being operated at the time of the accident by her son, Robert F. Dobbert, with her permission, in a northerly direction on the Mohawk Trail approaching the Hairpin Curve, so-called, at a reasonable rate of speed; and that there were three other passengers in the Dobbert vehicle.

The defendant, Eugene Robare, was the operator of a 1950 Oldsmobile coupe automobile, which was owned by and registered in the name of the other defendant, his mother, Edith C. Robare; and Eugene Robare was operating said motor vehicle the evening of March 2, 1955, with the permission of the said Edith C. Robare and had parked the vehicle on the westerly side of the Hairpin Curve, in the Town of Clarksburg, parallel to a sidewalk on the westerly side of the Hairpin Curve.

The motor vehicle of the defendant at the time of the accident was parked in a space or spaces provided by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and designated as a Parking Area by said authority on the westerly side of the Hairpin Curve; said automobile was facing south and was stopped in said Parking Area without its lights on; and there was some snow in the Parking Area between the westerly side of the defendant’s automobile and the curve.

The locus of the accident was. not lighted by street lights; it was snowing at the time of the accident; and the son of the plaintiff operated the plaintiff’s automobile in such a manner that the right front end of the plaintiff’s automobile collided with and struck the .left rear end of the defendant’s automobile.

The width of the travelled.part of the highway [4]*4east of the locus of the accident is 33 ½ feet and that each lane of travel at the locus is feet wide; and the plaintiff’s son had sufficient space in which to pass the defendant’s automobile and the accident was caused entirely by the negligence of the plaintiff’s son in failing to keep in his own traffic lame and in failing to observe the parked automobile of the defendant in sufficient time to avoid a collision.” (Emphasis added).

The trial judge denied the plaintiff’s following requests for rulings:

(1) The Court must find as a matter of law that the defendant’s motor vehicle, which was stationary on a public highway in the nighttime and without displaying a lighted rear light in compliance with Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws, was in violation of said Chapter and Section.

(2) The Court must find as a matter of law that the defendant’s violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws contributed to the cause of the accident.

(3) The Court must find as a matter of law that the defendant’s violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws is an act of negligence.

(4) The Court is warranted in finding that the defendant was negligent when the defendant’s automobile was parked on a public highway without displaying a red light on the rear of the vehicle in the nighttime in violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws.

(5) The Court is warranted in finding that the defendant’s violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of [5]*5the General Laws contributed to the cause of the accident.

(8) The Court must rule as a matter of law that the defendant’s violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws was the proximate cause contributing to the damage suffered to the plaintiff’s motor vehicle. motor vehicle, then the Court must rule as a

(9) If the Court finds that the bailee, Robert Dobbert was negligent in the operation of the motor vehicle, then the Court must rule as a matter of law that the negligence of the bailee cannot be imputed to the plaintiff..

(11) The Court must find as a matter of law that where an automobile is parked in the nighttime on the side of a highway where parking is permitted without displaying a rear light in compliance with Chapter 90, Section 7 and Chapter 85, Section 15, is in violation of said Chapters and Sections, providing the rules and regulations of the authority, who has control of said highway do permit parking in said area without lights on the rear of a motor vehicle.

(12) On all of the facts and all of the evidence, the Court must rule as a matter of law in favor of the plaintiff for the following reasons:—

A. The negligence of the operator of the plaintiff’s automobile should not be imputed to the plaintiff.

B. The defendant’s motor vehicle was parked on the highway in the nighttime without displaying a lighted rear light in compliance with Chapter 85, Section 15, and Chapter 90, Section 7 of the General Laws.

[6]*6C. The violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 and Chapter 90, Section 7 of the General Laws was negligence, and the violation of the same was the proximate and the contributing cause to the accident.

(13) The Court must find as a matter of law that the motor vehicle operated by the defendant, Eugene Robare, was illegally registered and an outlaw on the highway.

Plaintiff claims to be aggrieved by the refusal of the trial judge to grant the above requests.

We find no prejudicial error.

The plaintiff contends that the trial judge in his finding did not plainly and clearly state the reason for the denial of his requests or state that he found the violation of the statute was a .condition and not a cause of the accident. We do not agree with this contention. We believe that the word “entirely”, as used in [the findings] means that the trial judge found that the plaintiff’s son was solely and wholly to blame for the accident, and that the statement is both in substance and effect a finding that the defendant, Eugene Robare, was free from negligence, which would imply a finding that the way and manner in which the Robare automobile was parked was only a circumstance and not a proximate cause contributing to the damage suffered by the. plaintiff. This is in line with the reasoning in Connell v. Maynard, 322 Mass. 245, 246, where it says that “the judge found ‘the manner in which the accident [7]*7occurred is a matter of conjecture.’ . . . The finding of the judge was in substance that the defendant was not shown to have caused injury to the plaintiff by any negligence.”

Request 1, ought tó have been granted, but there was no prejudicial error because it became immaterial in view of the judge’s findings of fact. Connell v. Maynard, 322 Mass. 245 and cases cited.

Requests 2, 3, 8, and 12, in effect called for a ruling that as a matter of law the defendant, Eugene Robare’s, violation of Chapter 85, Section 15 of the General Laws, was in and of itself an act of negligence or was a pro'ximate cause contributing to the damage suffered to the plaintiff’s motor vehicle. All these requests were rightly refused.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Mass. App. Dec. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbert-v-robare-massdistctapp-1961.