Maloy v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.
This text of 104 N.E. 459 (Maloy v. Boston Elevated Railway 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff a pedestrian, and the defendant’s car came into collision at a cross walk, and the questions of her due care and the negligence of the motorman were properly left to the jury upon conflicting evidence. In his instructions, which fully and clearly presented the issues, the presiding judge,
But in connection with these instructions the judge went further and said, that a pedestrian under the circumstances disclosed in the case had the right to go in front of an electric car [110]*110which he sees approaching one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet away “provided you go upon the track of the electric car sufficiently in front of the car so that the motorman by the use of the devices for stopping the car can stop it, and avoid coming in contact with you.” To this instruction the defendant duly excepted.
The rights of the plaintiff and the defendant in the concurrent use of the public ways often has been stated, each must take reasonable precautions to avoid injury to the other. O’Brien v. Blue Hill Street Railway, 186 Mass. 446, 447. It is probable, as the plaintiff urges, that all the judge meant, was to state the rule in his own way, and it is settled that a single sentence or paragraph of a charge cannot be disconnected from the context as ground for reversible error, if as a whole the instructions are correct. Doe v. Boston & Worcester Street Railway, 195 Mass. 168, 172. Plummer v. Boston Elevated Railway, 198 Mass. 499. It was said in Hamilton v. Boston Elevated Railway, 213 Mass. 420, 423, that “a general exception to specific portions of the charge where no specific requests are asked for will not be sustained unless substantive error or injustice plainly appears.” Commonwealth v. Meserve, 154 Mass. 64. See Old Colony Trust Co. v. Bailey, 202 Mass. 283. A careful reading of the entire charge, however, does not remove the serious objection that the statement excepted to omitted the important element of the due care of the traveller, or, in the case at bar, care of the plaintiff. The jury had the right to understand that the unqualified instruction was binding and must be followed, even if under the conditions shown by the evidence for the defendant they were satisfied that the plaintiff ought not in the exercise of due care to have attempted to cross if the car was only thirty or forty feet distant.
Exceptions sustained.
White, J.
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104 N.E. 459, 217 Mass. 108, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloy-v-boston-elevated-railway-co-mass-1914.