48 A.2d 126 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1946
Argued April 11, 1946. This is a trespass action brought by a husband and wife to recover for personal injuries incurred by them *239 when struck by a street car of defendant company. The jury returned a verdict for the husband in the amount of $2459.05 and for the wife in the amount of $500.00. Defendant moved for judgment n.o.v. on the ground that the plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence and for a new trial on the ground that the verdicts were excessive. Both motions were refused by the court below, and this appeal was taken.
The plaintiffs, while walking longitudinally on Willow Avenue in the Borough of Castle Shannon, were injured at 10:35 p.m. on December 6, 1943, when struck from the rear by one of defendant's interurban street cars. At the place of the accident Willow Avenue, a public street 100 feet wide, is constructed on three levels. The roadway on the upper level is paved with cinders and at a level eight feet below this roadway there is another roadway paved with concrete on which there are double street car tracks. This roadway extends approximately 12 inches on each side of the outer rail of the double tracks. Three feet below this concrete roadway is another concrete roadway which, according to the testimony, "isn't safe to walk on because there are too many machines" . . . "hardly anyone walks down there". The upper and center roadways are connected by steps at a point opposite the plaintiffs' home, which was their destination on the night of the accident. If the plaintiffs had used the lower roadway, it would have necessitated their travelling an additional 500 feet along it, going through an underpass and retracing their steps 500 feet along the upper roadway. Consequently, to reach their home the plaintiffs had to choose between the upper and center roadways. The plaintiffs, from the point where the highway separates into the three levels above described, proceeded on the center roadway, walking on the outbound track. After going approximately 250 feet on this track, they saw a car approaching on that track, stepped on the inbound track, and while walking there were struck from the rear by a street car travelling in the same direction. *240
It was not contributory negligence per se for the plaintiffs to walk longitudinally on the roadway on which the defendant's tracks were located, (Gilbert v. Stipa,
According to the testimony in the instant case, before the plaintiffs stepped from the outbound track on to the inbound track, on which they were struck, they looked back and saw nothing on the latter; that they looked back three or four times while traversing 100 feet; that there was no headlight on the street car and a curtain back of the motorman hid the lights, if any, *241 which were lit in the street car; and that they did not see the car until too late to escape being struck.
In support of its motion for judgment n.o.v., the defendant endeavors to bring the facts of the case at bar within the rule of those cases which hold that a person who is faced with a choice of two routes, one of which is safe and the other subject to risks and dangers, must choose the former or otherwise assume the risk of being contributorily negligent as a matter of law.Levitt v. B/G Sandwich Shops Inc.,
In Gilmartin v. Lackawanna Val. Rapid Transit Co.,
A person will not be held guilty of negligence as a matter of law unless the evidence is clear and unmistakable. Murphy v.Bernheim and Sons., Inc.,
The verdict for the husband in this case includes medical expenses for him and his wife ($190), hospital expenses for both ($220), loss of wages ($500), loss of wife's services, pain and suffering, and loss of future earnings. He was confined to the hospital for ten days and required medical attention for several months thereafter. He suffered numerous lacerations and contusions, a fracture of one of the metacarpal bones of his right hand and a permanent impairment of hearing in one of his ears. He is a painter by trade and, as a result of his injuries, was unable to work for two months, and testified that since the accident he is unable to paint at high altitudes. The wife suffered multiple lacerations of the face, contusion of both knees, and various other contusions of the body. She was in the hospital for 16 days and under a doctor's care for several weeks thereafter, during part of which time she was confined to bed.
It is the duty of the trial court, in the first instance, to control the amount of the verdict rendered by the *243
jury. An appellate court will reverse the trial court for approving the amount of a verdict only where this course is imperative, and where the verdict evidences such a clear abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court as shocks the appellate court's sense of justice. King v. Equitable Gas Co.,
Judgments affirmed.