White Sewing Machine Co. v. Phenix Nerve Beverage Co.

74 N.E. 600, 188 Mass. 407, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1184
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 74 N.E. 600 (White Sewing Machine Co. v. Phenix Nerve Beverage 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
White Sewing Machine Co. v. Phenix Nerve Beverage Co., 74 N.E. 600, 188 Mass. 407, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1184 (Mass. 1905).

Opinion

Braley, J.

This is an action to recover the value of an automobile partially destroyed by the defendant’s negligence while in its possession under a contract of rental with an option of purchase.

After the machine had been returned to the plaintiff at Boston it was sent on August 7,1903, as freight, to Cleveland, Ohio, where, some time in March, 1904, it was examined by mechanical experts, whose qualifications were admitted. But the defendant excepted to the admission of their depositions giving an opinion of its value because no testimony had been offered by the plaintiff that its condition remained the same during the intervening period.

Having shown the state of repair when received and shipped, and there being no suggestion by the defendant of any change before the examination, the presumption which might be drawn from the whole evidence, that the automobile seen and examined by the experts was in all respects unchanged, presented a question of fact. Leighton v. Morrill, 159 Mass. 271, 278.

The length of time, the means of transportation used, the improbability of any intermeddling, the correspondence in their description of it by the experts, with similar evidence of the defendant’s witnesses, were circumstances affecting the force of the presumption, but did not as matter of law require the withdrawal of the case from the jury to whose determination it was properly submitted under correct instructions. Laplante v. Warren Cotton Mills, 165 Mass. 487, 489. Droney v. Doherty, 186 Mass. 205, 207.

The remaining exception is to the denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial which was asked for because of the alleged misconduct of two of the jurors in falling asleep while the case was on trial before them.

Ho doubt the defendant was constitutionally entitled to the intelligent judgment of each member of the panel. If part of the evidence was lost by the sleeping jurors this might be prejudicial to him in obtaining such result, and furnish ground for the granting of a new trial. But whether he suffered any wrong from this cause depended upon the fact whether they were asleep. This was a question of fact on which the presiding judge finds, upon the evidence submitted at the hearing on tho [409]*409motion, that they neither slept, nor did any material portion of the evidence, or of his instructions, escape their attention.

This finding, although not open to review by us, appears to have been amply justified, and is decisive. Schendel v. Stevenson, 153 Mass. 351. Olivieri v. Atkinson, 168 Mass. 28, 30. See also Stone v. St. Louis Stamping Co. 156 Mass. 598, 600.

Exceptions overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.E. 600, 188 Mass. 407, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-sewing-machine-co-v-phenix-nerve-beverage-co-mass-1905.