Carter v. Boston & A.R. Co.

Decision Date08 December 1900
Citation177 Mass. 228,58 N.E. 694
PartiesCARTER v. BOSTON & A. R. CO.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

J. R. Kane, for plaintiff.

F. P Goulding and W. C. Mellish, for defendant.

OPINION

MORTON J.

A comrade of the plaintiff had occasion to go to the defendant's freight house in Spencer from his father's store to carry some crates of eggs for shipment by the defendant's road. The plaintiff went with him as a volunteer to assist him. The freight-house door was locked and no freight was being received on that day, though the plaintiff did not know this. The plaintiff took hold of the chain with which the door was locked, and shook and rattled it, for the purpose of seeing if he could not get in. As he turned away, a piece of iron weighing about 700 pounds, which stood on the platform, nearly upright, leaning against the side of the house, fell on him, causing the injuries complained of. The accident happened on February 22, 1899 and the piece of iron had stood there since November 11th preceding. This action is to recover for the injuries thus sustained. The presiding justice directed a verdict for the defendant, and the case is here on the plaintiff's exceptions. We think that the ruling was right. Assuming without deciding, that the plaintiff was on the defendant's premises under such circumstances as to entitle him to protection from defendant's negligence, and assuming, also without deciding, that the fact that it was a legal holiday made no difference to the defendant's duty in that regard, the plaintiff was bound to show by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the accident was due to the defendant's negligence. The mere fact that the piece of iron was placed by the defendant on the platform, leaning against the side of the house, was not of itself evidence of negligence. The defendant had a right to place it there; and according to the undisputed testimony it had stood there securely since early in the preceding November. There were marks on the platform and the side of the building showing where it had stood, and that it was placed in a secure position originally. The only circumstance tending to show negligence on the defendant's part is the fact, if it was a fact, that the iron fell in consequence of some slight and inadvertent touch or push on the plaintiff's part. But whether that was so, and what the immediate cause of the fall was, is wholly a...

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1 cases
  • Pugmire v. Oregon Short Line R. Co.
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • December 11, 1907
    ... ... v. Cox [Neb.], 67 N.W. 740; Railroad Co. v. Tindall ... [Kan.], 46 P. 12; Carter v. Railroad [Mass.], ... 58 N.E. 694; Duffy v. Uplon, 113 Mass. 544; ... Electric Co. v ... Hardy, 173 ... Mass. 400; Mooney v. Lumber Co., 154 Mass. 407; ... Griffin v. Boston & A. Ry Co., 148 Mass. 143; ... Ross v. Cotton Mills, 140 N.C. 115, 52 S.E. 121; ... Stewart ... 407, 75 P. 703; ... Tennessee Coal Co. v. Hayes , 97 Ala. 201, ... 12 So. 98; Rummell Ar. v. Dilworth , 111 Pa. 343, 2 ... A. 355, 363; Haluptzok v. Railway Co. , 55 Minn. 446, ... 57 ... ...

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