Slack v. City of Boston
| Decision Date | 03 April 1931 |
| Citation | Slack v. City of Boston, 275 Mass. 187, 175 N.E. 504 (Mass. 1931) |
| Parties | SLACK v. CITY OF BOSTON. |
| Court | United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Report from Superior Court, Suffolk County; Frederic B. Greenhalge, Judge.
Action by Edna A. Slack against the City of Boston.Verdict for the plaintiff, after which the defendant's motion for a directed verdict was allowed and the case reported.
Judgment for the plaintiff.
William P. Higgins and John W. King, both of Boston, for plaintiff.
Joseph A. Campbell, Asst. CorporationCounsel, of Boston, for defendant.
The principles of law applicable here are so familiar that citation of authority is needless.The plaintiff was injured while traveling on Farnham street, admitted to be a public way which the city of Boston is by law required to keep reasonably safe for travel.She was going from her home to visit a brother at a nearby hospital; and chose to go along Farnham street, which was overflowed in part by water from a heavy shower, although there were other ways free from water which she might have used.While picking her way between the edge of the water upon the flooded sidewalk and the side of a building, the earth gave way under her and she fell into a hole hidden by the water.Scrambling to her feet on the curb of a driveway, brushing herself and going on, she fell again up to her waist in a hole in the driveway within the limits of the street.This hole also was hidden by the water.She herself, a few days before, had noticed at this place a hole in the driveway about four inches deep, eighteen inches wide and eighteen inches long.A witness testified that two or three days before the accident he had observed two holes, one in the sidewalk and one in the driveway on either side of the curb stone, about eighteen inches wide, two feet long parallel with the street, and from six to eight inches deep.He had assisted the plaintiff to rise from her fall into this hole.The day after the accident a policeman saw a horse and lantern at this place, and a hole about two feet deep by eighteen inches wide.The city admitted that it had received sufficient notice, duly served within the legal period, of the time, place and cause of the accident.
Here, then, there was evidence of a hole large enough to create a defect in the highway, which had been there so long that, in the exercise of proper care and diligence, the city might have had reasonable notice of it.G. L. c. 84, § 15.That it was concealed by the water at...
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...her conduct in walking over the sidewalk negligent. Her knowledge of the defect was only a fact to be considered by the jury. Slack v. Boston, 275 Mass. 187 . Beckwith Boylston, 284 Mass. 279 . Barton v. Boston, 301 Mass. 492 . Mello v. Peabody, 305 Mass. 373 . Cox v. Boston, 254 Mass. 498,......
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... ... Warren G. Miller, Boston, for plaintiff ... Before HALE, C.J., and ROSE, KEVILLE, GRANT and ARMSTRONG, JJ ... taken a different route establish that she was contributorily negligent as a matter of law (Slack ... v. Boston, 275 Mass. 187, 189, 175 N.E. 504, 1931), particularly [3 Mass.App.Ct. 325] in ... 1 Powers Contracting Corp ... 2 G.L. c. 84, § 15, applies only to a 'county, city, town or person by law obliged to repair' a public way ... 3 Powers' contention that the ... ...