82 Pa. Super. 605 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued October 18, 1923. A servant was driving defendant's automobile on Somerset Street on a down grade. Plaintiff's son, a boy of fourteen, came out an alley and started to cross the street not at a regular crossing. Defendant's driver was then eighty-one feet away, "just crossing Sterner Street." The driver had already applied the brakes, which were screeching loudly, and the car was sliding. Notwithstanding the continued application of the brakes, the car proceeded, skidded to the left, struck the boy and proceeded a distance of thirty-six feet before it was brought to a stop.
The only question raised on the appeal is the contributory negligence of the boy. Taking the testimony of the witnesses in its most favorable aspect for the plaintiff, the car, as stated above, was eighty-one feet away when the boy started over the roadway. He could have safely crossed, had he proceeded, but he was confused. What caused his confusion may have been the fact that the car seemed to have pursued an erratic course. There is sufficient evidence in the case to show that it was sliding when it passed Sterner Street and the skid marks which were on the street and which were made by the car supported the inference that the car was beyond the control of the driver.
The court could not, as a matter of law, decide that the action of the boy in attempting to cross the street between crossings was negligent, for the speed of the car, the distance it was away, the side of the street on which it was approaching, (Lamont v. Adams Express Co.,
The appellant relies upon the case of McAvoy v. Kromer,
The judgment is affirmed.
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