Peskin v. Buckley
Peskin v. Buckley
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of tort to recover damages
There was evidence that, while the plaintiff was operating his automobile with due care, the defendant drove his car “at an excessive rate of speed” upon and into the plaintiff’s automobile, thereby causing the harm and damage complained of. There was also evidence that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care, and that the collision was attributable in part to the negligent driving of the plaintiff’s car.
Without objection or exception, the supervising inspector of the State registry of motor vehicles in Worcester County testified that he partly investigated an automobile accident in which the plaintiff was involved in November, 1926; that the plaintiff told him at the office of the registry “he was crossing Washington Square at an estimated speed of seventeen miles an hour, and that he was in collision with this car which he hadn’t seen up to the time of contact.” The defendant then asked the witness, “What official action was taken in regard to Peskin’s license?” Subject to the exception of the defendant the judge excluded the answer to the question, and the defendant made an offer of proof in substance “that the license of the plaintiff was suspended.” In support of the relevancy of the proffered evidence the defendant relies on G. L. c. 90, § 22, which reads: “The registrar may suspend or revoke any certificate of registration or any license issued under this chapter, after due hearing, for any cause which he may deem sufficient.”
It is plain the mere suspension of the plaintiff’s license could have no relevancy, no rational tendency to prove want of due care by the plaintiff, and it is obvious that the fact of the suspension, if admitted in evidence, would be prejudicial to the plaintiff. Beauregard v. Benjamin F. Smith Co. 213 Mass. 259. The evidence was rejected rightly.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles Peskin v. John F. Buckley
- Status
- Published