Shear v. Rogoff

193 N.E. 63, 288 Mass. 357, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1309
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 N.E. 63 (Shear v. Rogoff) 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
Shear v. Rogoff, 193 N.E. 63, 288 Mass. 357, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1309 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Field, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff by her next friend to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of her being struck by an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. The case comes before us on the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict, to the refusal to rule as requested by the defendant, to certain portions of the charge, and to the exclusion of evidence.

It could have been found that on October 9, 1931, at some time between 4:30 and 5:30 in the afternoon, the plaintiff, a girl then about three years and nine months old, while in the street near the house in which she lived, was struck by an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. And it is undisputed that the plaintiff was injured.

1. The motion for a directed verdict was denied rightly.

The defendant does not contend that the evidence did not warrant a finding of negligence on his part or that it could be ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff did not exercise the care to be expected of a child of her age, intelligence and experience under like circumstances. But the defendant contends that the plaintiff, by reason of her age, as matter of law was incapable of exercising any care for her safety in the street, that consequently she cannot prevail in this action without proof either that she was not careless according to the standard of care required of an adult under like circumstances or that the person in charge of her exercised due care to protect her against the risk of such harm as she sustained, and that the evidence did not warrant a finding of either of these facts. The [359]*359judge, without objection by either party, charged the jury, in substance, that a child of the age of the plaintiff was incapable of exercising' any care for her safety in the street, and we deal with the case on the basis of this ruling without discussion of its correctness. See Minsk v. Pitaro, 284 Mass. 109, 113. Compare DeFuria v. Mooney, 280 Mass. 447, 449, and cases cited.

A verdict for the defendant could not rightly have been directed since, though on this branch of the case the plaintiff is not aided by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 85, the evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiff at the time of the accident was in the custody of her seventeen year old sister who exercised due care for her protection, that is, that the plaintiff was in the street without fault on the part of her custodian. DeFuria v. Mooney, 280 Mass. 447, 449.

There was evidence tending to show the following facts, though there was also evidence in some respects conflicting therewith: The accident occurred on a street running about east and west in front of the house in which the plaintiff lived. This street was forty feet wide and consisted of a roadway for vehicular traffic twenty-five feet wide and on each side of this roadway a sidewalk (or strip of loam and sidewalk) seven and one half feet wide. The house was on the south side of the street, near the sidewalk. The distance between this house and the next house on the east varied at different points from about fifteen to thirty feet. Between these houses was a yard in front of which was a fence. The plaintiff was struck by the defendant’s automobile when she was in the middle, or south of the middle, of the roadway in front of the house east of that in which she lived. Two automobiles were parked on the street, but none had passed through the street for ten minutes before the defendant came along. The plaintiff was “an obedient child at all times,” and “in size, activity, intelligence and health was about average for her age.” Sometime before the accident an adult sister had talked with her about “automobiles and streets and street dangers,” and had told her always to be careful. On the day of the accident the plaintiff’s mother [360]*360instructed another sister of the plaintiff, aged seventeen years, to watch her. This sister and the plaintiff went out of the house together. The sister sat on the first floor piazza of the house from about three o’clock in the afternoon until shortly before the accident “reading a newspaper and taking charge of the plaintiff and watching her.” The plaintiff meanwhile was on the sidewalk, near the fence, watching boys play ball in the yard. Shortly before the accident the sister went into the house to get a drink of water. Before going into the house she warned the plaintiff not to go off the sidewalk. She then went down the hall, which was about 'twenty-five feet long, and, when she had walked about twenty feet of the distance, heard the noise of brakes. She testified that “just about half a second” had passed from the time she started to go into the house until she heard this noise. She then ran outside and found that the accident had occurred. This sister testified also that there was nothing to prevent her from taking the plaintiff into the house with her or from calling an adult member of the family to come out while she went into the house, but while this testimony might have been disbelieved there was no evidence to the contrary.

Clearly the jury were warranted in finding that the plaintiff’s mother exercised due care in entrusting her to the custody of her seventeen year old sister, and that this sister exercised due care for the protection of the plaintiff so long as she remained on the piazza watching the plaintiff. Ayers v. Ratshesky, 213 Mass. 589, 591-592. McDonough v. Vozzela, 247 Mass. 552. Faircloth v. Framingham Waste Material Co. 286 Mass. 320. And in view of the evidence of what the plaintiff was doing, her intelligence and obedient nature, and the warnings given to her, the jury were not precluded from finding that this exercise of care over the plaintiff by her sister was not interrupted by the sister’s leaving the piazza temporarily for the natural purpose of getting a drink of water. Dowd v. Tighe, 209 Mass. 464, 467. Herd v. Boston Elevated Railway, 265 Mass. 125, 127, and cases cited. See also Ingraham v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 207 Mass. 451, 455. The evidence tended [361]*361to minimize the risk of such a temporary diversion from the plaintiff of her sister’s attention. DeFuria v. Mooney, 280 Mass. 447, 450. Where the evidence of the exercise by a custodian of care over a child goes so far as it does in this case, it is not necessarily fatal that the temporary diversion of the attention of the custodian was not due to such family or other exigency as has been given weight in some cases. See, for example, Butler v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 177 Mass. 191. See also Hewitt v. Taunton Street Railway, 167 Mass. 483. Cotter v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 180 Mass. 145, and Stachowicz v. Matera, 257 Mass. 283, specially relied on by the defendant, are distinguishable. In each of these cases* unlike the present case, the custodian substantially abandoned her duty to care for the child.

2. There was no reversible error in the refusal by the judge to rule as requested by the defendant or in the charge.

The defendant, at the close of the evidence, requested certain rulings including the following: “3. On all the evidence there is no evidence that the person entrusted with the safety of the plaintiff exercised reasonable care on her behalf,” and “4.

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Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 63, 288 Mass. 357, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shear-v-rogoff-mass-1934.