Faircloth v. Framingham Waste Material Co.

190 N.E. 609, 286 Mass. 320, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1058
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 24, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 190 N.E. 609 (Faircloth v. Framingham Waste Material Co.) 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
Faircloth v. Framingham Waste Material Co., 190 N.E. 609, 286 Mass. 320, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1058 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Donahue, J.

The plaintiff, a boy three years and seven months old, while running across Sca.mmp.il Street, Quincy, in the vicinity of his home, was hit and injured by an automobile truck driven by an employee of the defendant. The trial judge in the District Court found [322]*322for the plaintiff and reported to the Appellate Division certain rulings made and refused by him on the defendant’s requests for rulings. The Appellate Division held that the trial judge erred in refusing to give the defendant’s second and fourth requests, namely: “2. On all the evidence there is no evidence that any negligence of the defendant, its agent or servants had any causal connection with the injuries sustained by the plaintiff”; “4. There is no evidence to indicate that the plaintiff could be seen by the operator of the defendant’s automobile for more than an instant, if at all, before the happening of the accident herein involved.” It “found and decided that there was prejudicial error in the rulings of the trial court” and ordered that “Finding and judgment be entered for the defendant.” From that order the plaintiff has appealed.

About an hour and a half before the accident the plaintiff’s mother put him in charge of a nine year old sister and permitted the two children to go out and play on the sidewalk and in front yards of other houses on the street. The mother thereafterward was engaged in her household duties but she looked out the window several times and saw her children, the last time being about five minutes before the accident, when she saw them with other children in the' front yard of one of the houses in the neighborhood, which was residential in character. It does not appear that the street was one bearing an unusual amount of traffic. The plaintiff ran from the yard, where his mother had seen him, pursued as it might Mve been found by another somewhat older boy. At that instant the nine year old sister was at the rear of a driveway leading to a garage in the rear of those premises. The trial judge in substance found and ruled that the plaintiff was not of sufficient age and experience to be allowed unattended upon a public street. See Mulligan v. Curtis, 100 Mass. 512; Dowd v. Tighe, 209 Mass. 464; Coldiron v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 253 Mass. 462, where the ages of the children concerned were respectively three years six months, three years eight months, and three years ten months. The plaintiff in running into the street did not [323]*323use the care required of an adult under the same circumstances, Slattery v. Lawrence Ice Co. 190 Mass. 79, or conduct himself in a manner which would be considered careful if his movements had been directed by an adult person of ordinary prudence. Miller v. Flash Chemical Co. 230 Mass. 419. The burden was on the plaintiff to prove that his mother and his sister in their custody of him were not negligent. We cannot say as matter of law on the facts appearing in the record that the mother was negligent in the choice of the nine year old sister as the plaintiff’s immediate custodian, Travers v. Boston Elevated Railway, 217 Mass. 188, Pinto v. Brennan, 254 Mass. 298, or in not personally giving the plaintiff more supervision, while he was out of the house, than she in fact did give. Sullivan v. Boston Elevated Railway, 192 Mass. 37. Ayers v. Ratshesky, 213 Mass. 589. Nor can we say as matter of law that the sister in her custody of the plaintiff failed to use the care which was required of her, that is, the care reasonably to be expected of a child of her age. Collins v. South Boston Railroad, 142 Mass. 301, 315. Roberge v. Follette, 261 Mass. 438, 440. See also McDonough v. Vozzela, 247 Mass. 552; Clark v. Martin, 261 Mass. 60.

The evidence is conflicting on many elements of fact which bear on the question of the driver’s conduct. This is true even of distances between fixed points referred to in the testimony. It was agreed at the argument before us that the trial judge took a view and it would seem that what he then observed must have been helpful in fixing essential facts. While the case is close, we think that on the record before us it cannot be said that the finding by the trial judge that the driver was negligent was unwarranted. Since .there is conflict in the testimony we here follow, as we must, the version most favorable to the plaintiff.

A very short distance from the point where the accident occurred the defendant’s truck coming from an intersecting street entered Scammell Street close to its center and was proceeding in a westerly direction. On the southerly half of the street, at the driver’s left, was a large covered moving van which had backed at an angle [324]*324partially into a driveway. It extended out into the street fourteen to sixteen feet leaving between its front and the northerly edge of the street no more room than enough to permit the passage of the defendant’s truck. The driver turned to his right, to pass the front of the van, then turned to his left, and the front left wheel of the truck came into collision with the plaintiff at a point near the center of the street and eighteen or twenty feet west of the van. Although the brakes were applied by the driver the truck went twenty feet further before it came to a stop. There was testimony that another automobile was parked on the north edge of the road a little westerly of the location of the front of the van. If this were true it would explain the driving of the truck to the left and toward the center of the street. But there was other testimony that no such parked automobile was in the vicinity. If this were believed it might have been found that without occasion the driver left his right hand side of the street and drove to the center, where the collision occurred.

We think the evidence warranted the finding that the driver could have seen the boy in the street running into the path of his truck in season to avoid hitting him and that he did not see him until after the collision. The angle at which the van was placed would seem to afford the driver a favorable opportunity to see that portion of the surface of the street to his left and west of the truck which must have been traversed by the boy before the cab of the truck, where the defendant’s employee was seated, actually reached the front of the van. On testimony of witnesses estimating the speed of the truck it might have been found to be fifteen miles an hour. Considering the relation between that and any speed that the boy could possibly attain in running the distance from the yard to the center of the street where he was struck, it could have been found that he was out in the street and sufficiently far away from the van so that a prudent driver would have seen him and would have done something to avoid the collision and would not, under the circumstances existing, have turned to the left and hit him in the center of the street. The driver [325]*325testified that while passing the .van “I think I was looking ahead.” If he was and did not see the boy, there was warrant for the finding by the trial judge that he must have been looking carelessly.

There was testimony introduced by the plaintiff that following the accident the driver said that he did not see the plaintiff until after the collision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 N.E. 609, 286 Mass. 320, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faircloth-v-framingham-waste-material-co-mass-1934.