Ghiz v. Wantman

149 N.E.2d 595, 337 Mass. 415, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 674
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 18, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 149 N.E.2d 595 (Ghiz v. Wantman) 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
Ghiz v. Wantman, 149 N.E.2d 595, 337 Mass. 415, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 674 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Williams, J.

This is an action of tort by the administratrix of the estate of Michael C. Ghiz to recover for his death and conscious suffering resulting from being struck by the defendant’s automobile. The case was tried on counts 2 and 3 of the plaintiff’s declaration which alleged respectively that the death and conscious suffering were caused by the defendant’s negligence.

Evidence presented by the plaintiff was substantially as follows. The decedent, a man forty-seven years of age, was employed by the defendant as a handy man at her home in Brookline. On the afternoon of March 5, 1956, she and he drove in her automobile, a 1951 DeSoto convertible coupe, to Roxbury. Since the defendant was recovering from a surgical operation, the decedent operated the automobile and she sat on the front seat beside him. They carried an old bicycle which she had given him in the storage compartment at the rear of the automobile. At about 5:20 p.m. they stopped at a so called “gas station” on South Huntington Avenue to pump air into the bicycle tires. The air pump was near a fence at the north end of the station yard and the decedent backed the automobile to a point near the pump. The yard sloped slightly toward the fence. The decedent parked the automobile and got out on the left side, leaving the automobile in gear and the engine running or idling. He went around to the back and had lifted the cover of the storage compartment when the automobile rolled backward crushing him against the fence.

One D’Amico, the proprietor of the gas station, and Rose, his assistant, were in a building known as a lubritorium, about twenty feet from the air pump. Rose heard an engine “roar,” looked out, saw “that the car was going backwards” and in a “split second” heard a crash. He went out and over to the defendant who was sitting in the front seat of the automobile on the right hand side, partially leaning against the door. The decedent was lying with his legs under the automobile between the rear bumper and the *417 fence. The iron post which carried the air pump was bent almost flat. Rose asked the defendant to pull the automobile up, which she did but only for a distance of two feet because the iron post hooked onto the automobile.

D’Amico who had heard the crash also went out into the yard. He saw the defendant sitting in the front seat “in such a way, in kind of a sideway position with her back toward the right side door, front door, at an angle.” The automobile was about two and one half feet from the fence which was constructed of three-quarter inch boards. Several boards were broken and the fence bent backwards. The decedent was bleeding from nose and mouth and moaning. D’Amico saw him “trying to raise his head.” He moved his head and “just mumbled some words, but you couldn’t make them out.” D’Amico told him to keep still, and put some coats over him. The decedent was taken in an ambulance to the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital where he was admitted at 5:25 p.m. He was in a cyanotic and comatose condition. No blood pressure was obtainable; there were gurgling sounds in his chest and blood mucous was coming from his mouth. He “stopped breathing” at 6 p.m.

The defendant told a police officer at the scene of the accident that “the car all of a sudden shot backwards and struck Mr. Ghiz,” and “that the car started abruptly with a great deal of force backwards.” At her home that evening she said to another officer that “He [the decedent] got out of the left side and went to the rear, and about a minute later the car moved back about a foot, and it seemed to move back fast and suddenly. The engine was idling at the time. When the car first started to move backwards, I heard a moan from the rear of the car. I tried to put my foot on the brake, but the car had already stopped. It felt as if it had struck something, as though it hit the pump. . . . The car seemed to me to be creeping backwards. I was looking out the window when I realized it was moving, and I heard the moan.” To an investigator for the registry of motor vehicles she said that the decedent “had left the car *418 in gear and that the hand brake . . . had not been applied; that he got out of the car at the left side, went to the rear of the car to put air into the tire, and that she was looking out the window of the car and then noticed that the car was in motion. She made an attempt to apply the brake, but the car had stopped before she could do so.”

The defendant rested at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence. She excepted to the refusal by the judge to direct a verdict for the defendant on the count for death, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on that count. The judge, subject to the plaintiff’s exception, directed a verdict for the defendant on the count for conscious suffering. These with other exceptions pertaining to rulings on evidence are presented in a consolidated bill of exceptions.

The evidence warranted a finding that for an interval after the decedent went to the rear of the automobile it remained stationary, then moved slightly backward, and suddenly went back fast with such force that it not only struck down the decedent but broke the fence and bent the iron post. Considered with the evidence of the roar from the engine it could be found that the cause of the final backward movement was something more than the slight down grade of the yard. It is, we think, a matter of common knowledge that a sudden application of gas to an automobile engine will, if in sufficient volume, cause a “roar” from the engine. The jury would be warranted in finding that in this case the “roar” heard by Rose came from the engine of the defendant’s automobile and was caused by such an application. The defendant admitted that when the automobile started to move she attempted to put her foot on the brake pedal which we may assume was located to her left and convenient to the ordinary position of the operator’s right foot. It could be found that in reaching with her foot to her left she pressed the throttle instead of the brake and caused a sudden flow of gas to the engine.

There was evidence that after the accident the mechanism of the automobile and the brakes were in good condition. The automobile according to expert testimony had a “semi *419 automatic transmission.” It had a fluid connection between engine and transmission which, although permitting the automobile to remain stationary while in gear with the engine running, would transmit power to the wheels if the flow of gas was accelerated.

A finding that the defendant caused the sudden backing of the automobile would depend not on speculation and conjecture but on a reasonable inference from the facts in evidence. See Eaton v. S. S. Pierce Co. 288 Mass. 323; Thomas v. Spinney, 310 Mass. 749; Marshall v. Carter, 301 Mass. 372.

If the jury were satisfied that the act of the defendant was the immediate cause of the injuries to the decedent they could find that the act constituted negligence.

It could not have been ruled as matter of law that negligence of the decedent was a contributing cause of his injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E.2d 595, 337 Mass. 415, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ghiz-v-wantman-mass-1958.