Appeal, No. 158 | Pa. | Jan 7, 1907

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Fell,

The defendant has a single track electric railway on one of the streets of the borough of. Monaea, on which one car is run every fifteen minutes. The track is at the middle of the street and there is room on either side for vehicles. The space between the rails is paved; the rest of the street is an ordinary dirt road. The plaintiffs at night were riding in a buggy at a slow trot on the track. The top of the buggy was down and they had looked back several times to see whether a car was coming. They first observed the car when it was a rod from them, and the buggy was struck before they succeeded in getting it clear of the track. The car was running fifteen miles an hour without a headlight and no signal of its- approach was given. Under this state of facts detailed by the plaintiffs and their witnesses, a verdict was directed for the defendant on the ground of the plaintiffs’ contributory negligence in driving on the track at night when there was room to drive on other parts of the street.

The conclusion reached by the learned trial judge was based on the decisions of this court in Gilmartin v. Rapid Transit Co., 186 Pa. 193" date_filed="1898-05-16" court="Pa." case_name="Gilmartin v. Lackawanna Valley Rapid Transit Co.">186 Pa. 193, and Penman v. Railway Co., 201 Pa. 247" date_filed="1902-01-06" court="Pa." case_name="Penman v. McKeesport, Duquesne & Wilmerding Railway">201 Pa. 247. In both of those cases the plaintiffs were pedestrians, and the ground of both decisions is that by walking along on the track of the railway company, they voluntarily exposed themselves to a known danger and were negligent in so doing. The track of a street railway company is not intended for use by pedestrians but it is open for use by those riding in vehicles. The - space between the rails in cities and boroughs is paved for that purpose, and the traveling public are at liberty to drive on it. Their right to use this part of the street is subordinate only to the right of the company to have a clear track. They are expected to use it both from necessity at times and for convenience when it offers a better passageway. One using it for convenience, as was the case here, cannot be charged with negligence simply because of the fact that he could have driven at the sides of the street. Whether under the circumstances the plaintiffs exercised proper care was for the jury.

The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.