Duran v. Union Freight Railroad
This text of 221 N.E.2d 405 (Duran v. Union Freight Railroad) 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.
Opinion
1. There was no error in denying the [392]*392motion for a directed verdict in this tort action. The evidence does not warrant the conclusion, contended for by the defendant, that this is one of the very unusual cases in which the plaintiff’s contributory negligence has been shown as a matter of law. It was for the jury to say whether the plaintiff, driving on Atlantic Avenue in Boston on a hazy night, took notice of the defendant’s unlighted freight car as soon as he should have in the exercise of due care, and whether his subsequent maneuvering of his automobile met the required standard. See Borden v. New York, N. H. & H. R.R. 339 Mass. 266, 271-272. Compare Levine v. Bishop, 292 Mass. 277, and cases cited.
2. The plaintiff’s testimony as to the value of his car before and after the accident was properly admitted. Willey v. Cafrella, 336 Mass. 623.
3. The defendant excepted to the statement of the judge in his charge that “the auditor system has not, in my opinion, worked very well.” The auditor had found for the defendant. The context of the judge’s remark is set out in the margin.1 Although extraneous and irrelevant, the com[393]*393ment was, we think, subject to exception only (1) if it implied that the system had not worked very well in respect of the report in the case on trial, and (2) if the defendant reasonably indicated to the judge that such was the basis of his exception.
We conclude that, in context, there was in the comment some implication against the particular report. The status of an auditor’s report, after other evidence has been introduced with the effect of taking away its artificial legal force and compelling effect as prima facie evidence, is well understood. It “remains evidence throughout the trial, and is entitled to be weighed like any other evidence upon any question of fact to which it is relevant.” Cook v. Farm Serv. Stores, Inc. 301 Mass. 564, 566. G. L. c. 221, § 56. In the particular language used by the judge to convey the essence of this rule to the jury, taken with the comment objected to, the jury could have concluded that the judge was suggesting that this auditor’s report as evidence, although something the statute required them to receive, was perhaps less significant than the other evidence before them.
We think it plain, however, that the judge did not intend any such implication and that this should have been reasonably apparent to counsel. The comment was a part of a discursive aside on how, as the judge believed, the Superior Court was getting along with its business. It appears likely that, if the objectionable implication had been expressed to the judge, he would have given a brief supplementary instruction adequate to remove any basis for exception. See DeWitt v. Wells, 294 Mass. 65, 66. In any event, the implication should have been stated, and the failure to do so defeats the exception. This was the colloquy: Counsel: “I object to your Honor’s remark that the auditor system has not worked very well.” The court: “Do you want to argue this?” Counsel: “I believe it should not have been said to the jury. Exception.” The court: “All right. Your exception is noted.” The judge’s question was addressed either to argument on the proposition he had stated and to which objection was made, or to argu[394]*394ment to state the basis of the objection. In either case, the question showed that the judge was not thinldng of the effect of the remark in context and it gave full opportunity to state why the remark was deemed prejudicial. We do not construe the remark as so inherently prejudicial that the objection was sufficiently made merely by counsel’s reference thereto.
jExceptions overruled.
The Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Cutter dissent on the grounds, first, that the objection to the trial judge’s irrelevant remark about the auditor system was adequate to inform the judge of the basis of the objection, and, second, that the remark was a prejudicial, gratuitous intrusion upon the function of the jury, tending to disparage the auditor’s report and to deprive it of the weight properly to be given to it under Cook v. Farm Serv. Stores, Inc. 301 Mass. 564, 566.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
221 N.E.2d 405, 351 Mass. 391, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duran-v-union-freight-railroad-mass-1966.