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Quinlivan v. Taylor (Two Cases)

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eBook details

  • Title: Quinlivan v. Taylor (Two Cases)
  • Author : Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
  • Release Date : January 17, 1937
  • Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 65 KB

Description

QUA, Justice. These actions are brought respectively for personal injuries and for consequential damages arising out of a collision on Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge between an automobile driven by the defendant in which the first named plaintiff, hereinafter called the plaintiff, was a passenger and a 'safety island' with a 'large circular affair on the end * * * with a light on top.' The evidence upon which the plaintiffs must rely to establish the defendant's gross negligence may be summarized as follows: The accident happened shortly after ten o'clock in the evening of March 1, 1933. It was snowing 'pretty badly.' After a time the snow began piling on the windshield. The view was becoming obstructed. The defendant was bobbing back and forth trying to see where he was going. The window was open on his side. The windshield wiper was not working. The plaintiff asked the defendant why he did not have it going. The defendant said, 'Well, it isn't going, but don't bother about it.' Thereafter they passed several of the 'safety islands' without hitting them. Then the plaintiff said, 'Gee, I can't see through this at all, you will have to do something about it.' The defendant said, 'Oh, forget it,' and put his hand out of the window and tried to brush the snow off the windshield. 'Right then' the crash occurred. The speed was thirty or thirty-five miles an hour. There was also evidence of statements by the defendant that he was trying to work the windshield wiper to knock some of the snow off; that he did not know where he was going and the first thing he knew 'he piled into the beacon'; that the 'blinker' on the island was operating; and that the accident was caused by reaching over to get at his windshield wiper. Although the distinction between gross negligence and ordinary negligence can be stated in general terms, it is often exceedingly difficult to draw the line in actual practice. Where there is evidence of negligence, as certainly there is in this case, it is generally easy to magnify it on the one side and to minimize it on the other. It is seldom that any one factor or any one precedent will be wholly decisive. The matter is likely to remain largely one of opinion in each case. Yet the distinction is well established and must be observed, lest all negligence be gradually absorbed into the classification of gross negligence.


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