80 Pa. Super. 430 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Opinion by
The plaintiff’s claim arises out of an automobile accident. The plaintiff was on the right side of the road and his car was struck by the defendant on the right side, that is on the. side which would ordinarily be farthest away from the defendant. This circumstance alone would bear the inference that' the defendant was at a
The other grounds set forth in support of the request for binding instructions need not be noticed for the facts alleged in the points were controverted, and the court could not assume them to be true.
Most of the other exceptions require but brief mention. The court excluded the offer to prove that the plaintiff at the time of the accident had said that he had had three other accidents. It would not have harmed to have allowed this, since part of the statement had already been admitted, and the whole statement could go in, but the exclusion of this, did no harm, for the proof of other accidents would throw no light on the facts involved in the present one.
It is alleged that the court refused to allow proof that the plaintiff could have stopped his car more readily if he had not been coasting at the time. An examination of
The question of whether the proof of damages suffered by the plaintiff was sufficient, might be of some moment were it not that it seems to be an after-thought and was not specifically raised at the trial. The plaintiff paid $715 for the car and testified that it was a total loss. Another witness fixed the value of the car at $75 after the accident, another $100, and the defendant’s witness $280, The car had run 3,000 miles. The plaintiff without objection testified that the car was worth a new car “to him” because it answered his purpose and that there was very little depreciation. When another witness was asked as to its market value at the time of the purchase or at the time of the accident, the attorney for the plaintiff stated that he had proof what had been paid for the car and the defendant’s attorney then stated “we are satisfied to take that as the valuation.” This was followed by proof of the value of the car after the accident. The jury gave the plaintiff $450. As the statement of the defendant’s attorney seems to have stopped further inquiry as to the value of the machine, we would not reverse the judgment because of the meagreness and unsatisfactory quality of some of the evidence of value. The witness on the stand had qualified as to his .knowledge of the value of automobiles, and had the defendant’s counsel not volunteered the statement that he accepted the valuation, the next question no doubt would have elicited the fact as to what the value of the car was at the time of the accident. On the record as presented
All the assignments are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.