Morrison v. Quincy Market Cold Storage & Warehouse Co.

83 N.E.2d 173, 323 Mass. 536, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 651
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 N.E.2d 173 (Morrison v. Quincy Market Cold Storage & Warehouse 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
Morrison v. Quincy Market Cold Storage & Warehouse Co., 83 N.E.2d 173, 323 Mass. 536, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 651 (Mass. 1948).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

These are four actions of tort, two by owners for damage to their automobiles and two by occupants of one of the automobiles for personal injuries, which occurred by reason “of a hole and depression and defective condition” in Atlantic Avenue, Boston, existing because of the defendant’s negligence. The jury returned verdicts for the defendant, and the plaintiffs allege exceptions to the charge.

There was evidence as follows: On August 14, 1945, about 1:15 a.m. George A. Morrison1 was driving an automobile owned by him on Atlantic Avenue, a public way. The female plaintiffs were riding with him. Suddenly the automobile went into and bounced out of a ditch two feet by fifteen feet and four feet deep. As they approached, they saw no barriers at or near the hole and no warning lights. When they got out of the automobile after the accident, they saw no lights or barriers. The plaintiff Hirst, driving his own automobile, was following the Morrison automobile, saw it swerve, drop, and then bounce, and, although he attempted to stop, was unable to do so, and his automobile went into and out of the ditch. The defendant had received from the city of Boston a permit to open the street, and on August 13 its employees made an excavation about five feet by five feet and four feet deep.2 At 4:30 p.m. when the employees left, they placed four wooden barriers around the hole, and left six lanterns, properly lighted, hanging on [538]*538the barriers. Lighted lanterns were also placed on top of the pile of dirt, and boards were placed over the excavation. They then went to a job at another location. At 8 p.m. they passed by the excavation, and conditions were unchanged. The following morning when they returned to work, they found some of the wooden barriers and some of the lanterns were broken.

A condition of the permit was that the person receiving it “shall place and maintain from the beginning of twilight, through the whole of every night, over or near the place so occupied, opened, obstructed or used, and over or near any dirt, gravel or other material placed in or near such place, a light or lights sufficient to protect travellers from injury.” 1

The judge charged the jury in substance that, in working under the permit, the defendant’s duty was “analogous” to that of a city or town in taking care of the street; that that duty was the statutory one2 to keep the highway reasonably safe for travellers;3 that the defendant was held to reasonable care only; and that if, at or about sunset, barriers with lights sufficient to give warning to travellers were put around the excavation, the defendant performed its duty notwithstanding that the barriers and lights might have been removed by 1:15 a.m., unless the defendant knew about their removal in time to remedy the situation. In this connection the judge paraphrased the charge approved by this court in Doherty v. Waltham, 4 Gray, 596, 597. The charge in the Doherty case was “that if the town had notice of the well [in the highway] being open, and at sunset sufficient barriers were placed around it to make it safe for the night to persons using ordinary care, the town would not be responsible for the injury to the plaintiff, if those barriers were afterwards removed, whether by accident or design, unless the town had reasonable notice of the removal [539]*539of the barriers and that the road had by such removal become again dangerous.” The charge in the cases at bar concluded: “Visualize as best you can what the situation was down there on Atlantic Avenue around sunset at or about the time the employees of the Quincy Market quit work for the night and how did they leave the place when they did quit work. And . . . according as you find as to how they left the place there, will determine whether or not there is liability on the part of this defendant.”

The plaintiffs excepted (1) to the statement that liability in these cases was analogous to that of a city or town; (2) to that portion of the charge in which the judge read from Doherty v. Waltham, 4 Gray, 596; and (3) “to any other portion of the charge referring to the liability of the defendant being determined as of conditions existing at sunset.”

The plaintiffs have not argued their first exception. We think that it was accurate to charge that the defendant’s duty under the permit was analogous to that of a city or town. See Norwood v. Somerville, 159 Mass. 105, 110-112.

The defendant contends that the third exception is to a small, detached portion of the charge (Draper v. Cotting, 231 Mass. 51, 63), that the charge must be read as a whole, and that the jury must have understood it accordingly. Hamilton v. Boston Elevated Railway, 213 Mass. 420, 423. We assume this point in the defendant’s favor.

The defendant further contends that, as there was no evidence that “it knew or should have known that the barriers and lights had been removed or that there were any unusual conditions calling for further precautions,” the detached portion was correct. We do not agree with this contention, however, and, moreover, we think that there was prejudicial error in the related question raised by the reading from Doherty v. Waltham, which is the basis of the second exception. The case last referred to, it should be observed, arose before the days of populous cities and towns, when traffic, as we know it, was wholly unknown, and long before the appearance on our highways of the automobile and those heavy, jarring motor vehicles, the truck, the trailer, and the bus.

[540]*540This court is not without knowledge of the nature of Atlantic Avenue, an important, crowded thoroughfare on which much traffic passes not only in the daytime but also after nightfall. See, for example, Stoliker v. Boston, 204 Mass. 522; Boston Elevated Railway v. Commonwealth, 310 Mass. 528. The charge, when read as a whole, instructed the jury that the defendant discharged its full duty if its employees had placed adequate safeguards upon discontinuing work for the day so long as the defendant did not actually learn of the removal of those safeguards. The permit, however, imposed an obligation upon the defendant to “maintain” as well as to “place” lanterns. We think that the jury could have found that this requirement was not met on a street like Atlantic Avenue by omitting to exercise reasonable oversight of the site of the excavation. Apparently the precaution was not taken of any planned, periodic observation of the spot. The single glimpse which the defendant’s employees had at 8 p.m. was entirely fortuitous. Granting that the defendant had this chance knowledge that all was well up to that time, it was a question for the jury whether the defendant should have inspected its barriers and lanterns before 1:15 a.m. and whether such failure was a cause of the accident. “Ordinarily the question whether a particular obstruction of a public way is a reasonable one or is negligently maintained, is one of fact for the jury.” Hurley v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 228 Mass. 365, 367.

This case falls within the authority of Myers v. Springfield, 112 Mass. 489, which shows that the rule given in Doherty v. Waltham, 4 Gray, 596, has not been one of invariable application. In the Myers

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E.2d 173, 323 Mass. 536, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-quincy-market-cold-storage-warehouse-co-mass-1948.