200 A. 58 | Pa. | 1938
This appeal by defendant in an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the minor plaintiff, twenty-six-months' old when they were received, presents an unusual situation. Although the child's parents are alive and the child lives with them, the suit is brought in her behalf by her grandmother as next *75 friend. This somewhat strange proceeding is for the obvious purpose of recovering damages from the insurance company which indemnified the father against liability for personal injuries resulting from the negligent operation of the automobile owned by him, in which the child's injuries were received, when it was negligently operated by defendant, who was driving with the father's permission.
It is urged upon us by appellant (really the insurance company) that the grandmother cannot maintain the action in the infant's behalf, the child's parents being alive and supporting her in their home. We think this position not maintainable. The sole purpose in having a next friend is to supply the want of capacity in the minor, to afford someone responsible for the costs. He is in no sense a party, "but resembles an attorney, or a guardian ad litem, by whom a suit is brought or defended in behalf of another": Haines v. Fitzgerald,
There was an arbitration of the case under the General Arbitration Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 715,
It is contended there is not sufficient evidence of negligence to warrant recovery. It is not defendant's fault if there is not. As was stated by the trial judge in his opinion, "We have . . . the open coöperation of the defendant in the preparation of the law suit for the plaintiff and a virtual admission of facts on his part, which, if believed, might warrant a verdict against him. The defendant was the principal witness for the plaintiff." Under defendant's testimony the jury could have found these to be the facts: The night the accident occurred it was raining and sleeting. Ice had formed on the road and it was very slippery. During the trip defendant was required to stop and wipe the ice from his *77
windshield. The car was traveling down grade at a speed of 25 to 30 miles per hour. As the car approached a point in the road where the asphalt joins the concrete with a drop of some four inches, the defendant, to avoid running into the drop at excessive speed, disengaged the clutch and applied the brakes, causing the car to skid a distance of over 150 feet and run into a pole. It was admitted that defendant was familiar with the condition of the road at this point. Under such of our cases as Griffith v. V. A. Simrell Son Co.,
It is earnestly presented to us that the record shows such a picture of fraud and collusion as to prevent a recovery, and that it would be unconscionable and contrary to public policy to permit the verdict to stand. As pointed out by the court below, facts were presented at the trial of the case which might indicate collusion. Our attention has been drawn in several instances to the alleged purpose, in tort actions, by collusion between plaintiff and defendant, to mulct insurance carriers, a recent instance being Renschler v. Pizano,
The last complaint is that the trial judge denied the right to have special findings by the jury. While we do not withdraw anything which we have said in favor of this procedure in such cases as Abraham Fur Co. v. Cameron,
The judgment against defendant is affirmed.