182 A. 720 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1935
Argued November 12, 1935. This action was brought in trespass for personal injuries the appellee sustained. The case was tried upon an amended statement of claim to which no affidavit of defense was filed. The jury returned a verdict in the sum of $2,000. The defendant filed motions for a new trial and judgment n.o.v. The motion for judgment n.o.v. was refused. The motion for new trial was also refused on the condition that the plaintiff file a remittitur for all of the verdict in excess of $1,500. Plaintiff filed a remittitur of all the verdict in excess of the sum of $1,500 and in due course, judgment was taken in this sum, from which judgment the defendant has taken this appeal.
The facts are correctly stated in the opinion of the lower court by THOMAS, P.J., from which we quote as follows: "The plaintiff, George Damm, on April 16, 1934, at about 9:00 P.M., boarded a bus of the defendant company at Mauch Chunk, Carbon County, Pennsylvania, for the purpose of travelling to a small town west of Tamaqua known as Brockton, a distance of about 20 miles. The road travelled was a state highway. The plaintiff offered his fare to the driver in charge of the bus, but the driver advised the plaintiff that fares would be collected on a second bus to which the defendant would be obliged to transfer. The night was very dark. When the bus upon which the plaintiff was riding arrived at the bridge leading from Mauch *383 Chunk to East Mauch Chunk, the bus driver stopped the bus and went out on the highway and removed a barricade which was erected across the highway leading from Mauch Chunk to Nesquehoning and which highway was temporarily closed by the Commonwealth for vehicular traffic. The barred road, however, was used by the defendant company for its busses. After the barricade was removed by the bus driver, he proceeded along the closed public highway for a distance of several hundred yards to a locality known as `The Liberties,' which is about half-way from the point where the barricade was erected at the bridge and the northern point of the highway, and about a half mile of which was closed for public travel on April 9, 1934. The road was under a state of reconstruction and repair by one H.S. Schaffer, who was under contract with the State Highway Department. The bus stopped at `The Liberties,' and the operator of the bus told the passengers to get off the bus and to walk up to the next bus. There was only one other passenger besides the plaintiff. The bus driver did not warn the plaintiff and the remaining passenger as to the condition of the road or of the fact that a hole about 15 yards long, approximately 24 feet wide, and 10 to 12 feet in depth existed in the road. The plaintiff carefully walked along the road, being able to see one or two steps ahead. After walking for about a quarter of a mile, he fell into the above hole and suffered the injuries complained of. There was no barricade or fence about the hole, nor were there any danger lights or warning signals along the road, nor was the plaintiff advised and he did not know of the dangerous condition of the highway. After the plaintiff was extricated from the hole, he was placed on the transfer bus owned and operated by the defendant company, and paid his fare and arrived at his destination in Brockton."
The assignments of error relate to the charge of the *384 court and in overruling the motion ex parte defendant for judgment non obstante veredicto.
Appellant contends that the trial judge erred in charging the jury and in holding that the duty of the defendant (appellant) towards the plaintiff (appellee) was that of carrier to passenger.
The salient facts on which the lower court relied in overruling the motion for judgment n.o.v., are so well stated in the opinion that we quote therefrom as follows: "Under the facts in this case the highway was barricaded and a detour established for the purposes of public travel and when the defendant company used such portion of the highway as had been determined by the authorities `not in use,' the defendant company was in the same position as if it had provided its own way and it knew, or should have known that this dangerous hole was in the highway and should have protected it by barricades or a light, or other warnings, so as to prevent passengers from being injured. There was no contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and the defendant offered no evidence as to its care of the plaintiff while he was a passenger. He was a total stranger, and there was no evidence that he knew of the condition of the road. When he was told by the bus driver to transfer cars in order to pursue the continuous journey from one bus to another, under the circumstances such as shown in this case, the relationship of carrier and passenger continued throughout the necessary acts of transfer. Considering that the public authorities had closed the road, no duty devolved upon the Commonwealth, or any of its agents, to make the highway safe for travel, and the defendant company, disregarding the closing of the road made the substituted dangerous way its own, and the defendant owed the plaintiff the care due a passenger."
The principle, as recognized in most jurisdictions, is stated in 6 American Law Reports, 1301, as follows: *385 "The weight of authority is to the effect, when a passenger who is making a continuous journey alights from a street car for the purpose of making a transfer, the relation of the carrier and passenger continues while he is in the necessary act of making the transfer and the carrier owes to him the same high degree of care which it owes to passengers on board its cars."
Likewise in 10 C.J., p. 629, Sec. 1051: ". . . . . . Where a passenger temporarily leaves the car at a place not a regular stopping place, he, for the time, surrenders his relation as a passenger, unless he so leaves the car on the express or implied invitation of the company for some necessary purpose incident to the journey, such as for the purpose of going around a wreck, washout, or other obstruction, and taking another train or car. One who leaves a car for the purpose of avoiding a collision does not lose his right to protection as a passenger."
Appellant relies upon the case of Keator v. The Scranton Traction Co.,
In Sowash v. The Consolidated Traction Co.,
In Killmeyer v. Traction Co. (Supreme Court of W. Va.
The cases cited by appellant are readily distinguishable from the instant case.
Appellant further claims that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and that defendant was therefore entitled to binding instructions.
While the testimony of Ciarvella, who accompanied plaintiff was to the effect that he warned plaintiff about the ruts or gutters in the road, there was no testimony that plaintiff was informed of the excavation into which *389
he fell. Plaintiff testified that the road appeared safe to travel. The testimony did not warrant the court in declaring plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. The court submitted this question to the jury under proper instructions, concerning which no complaint is made. The jury found in favor of plaintiff. Every fact and inference properly deducible from the evidence must be assumed in favor of the plaintiff. Kramer v. Standard Steel Car Co.,
We believe the case was properly disposed of by the lower court.
The assignments of error are overruled and judgment affirmed. *390