Grant v. City of Fitchburg
| Court | Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts |
| Writing for the Court | KNOWLTON, J. |
| Citation | Grant v. City of Fitchburg, 160 Mass. 16, 35 N.E. 84 (Mass. 1893) |
| Decision Date | 20 October 1893 |
| Parties | GRANT v. CITY OF FITCHBURG. |
C.F. Baker and Herbert
Parker, for plaintiff.
Edward P. Pierce, for defendant.
In this case we have no occasion to consider whether there was evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, for we are of opinion that there was no evidence that the plaintiff's intestate was in the exercise of due care. He was a child 20 months old, and was incapable of exercising care for himself. It was the duty, therefore, of his mother in whose custody he was, to care for him, and if his death is imputable to her negligence the plaintiff cannot recover. He was last seen by her, before his death, at the open gateway of the dooryard at the boundary of the public street. He had been playing about there, and once before on the same afternoon had been alone to the house of a neighbor, which was the third house from his home on the same street; and his mother had been obliged to go and find him, and bring him back. When she saw him at the gate, she was sitting, talking with another woman, on the steps at the rear of the house and she gave no further attention to him, and took no measures to ascertain where he was, for a quarter of an hour or more. In the mean time he had been out on the street unattended, and had been playing with other children, and in some way, no witness knew when or how, had got through the hole in the curbstone into the catch basin. His absence from home, unattended, on the public street, was prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of his mother, and there was no evidence in the case which tends to show a justification or excuse for her failure to look after him for 15 minutes...
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Boston & MRR v. Breslin
...was based upon a statute of Massachusetts, under which statute, as construed by the Massachusetts court in Grant v. City of Fitchburg, 160 Mass. 16, 35 N.E. 84, 39 Am.St. Rep. 449, the plaintiff could not I am further of the opinion that the determination of the question whether an owner or......
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... ... Mass. 94, 26 N.E. 430, 10 L. R. A. 653; Creed v ... Kendall, 156 Mass. 291, 31 N.E. 6; Grant v ... Fitchburg, 160 Mass. 16, 35 N.E. 84, 39 Am. St. Rep ... 449; Powers v. Quincy & Boston ... ...
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Grant v. Bangor Ry. & Electric Co.
...of exercising such care as a matter of law (Gibbons v. Williams, 135 Mass. 333); so a child of 20 months (Grant v. Fitchburg, 160 Mass. 16, 35 N. E. 84, 39 Am. St. Rep. 449); of 2 years (Wright v. Railroad Co., 4 Allen [Mass.] 283); of 2 years and 4 months (Callahan v. Bean, 9 Allen [Mass.]......
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