27 A.2d 898 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued April 21, 1942. Two legal questions are involved in this appeal: (1) Does an appeal lie from the order of the court below? (2) Was the plaintiff's driver guilty of contributory negligence, as matter of law? We think both must be answered in the affirmative.
1. The plaintiff brought an action of trespass to recover the damages to its automobile caused by a collision with defendant's train. Defendant presented a point for binding instructions in its favor, which the court refused. The jury disagreed. Defendant then obtained a rule to show cause why judgment should not be entered in its favor upon the whole record (Act of April 20, 1911, P.L. 70, 12 Pa.C.S.A. § 684), which the court discharged. Defendant appealed.
The Supreme Court, in the case of Lipsky v. Stolzer,
(2) We are of opinion that the evidence of plaintiff's superintendent, the driver of the automobile, convicted him of contributory negligence as matter of law.
The accident took place at a point in Penn Township, Butler County, where the McCalmont road crosses a single track line of the defendant company. It is known as McCalmont's Crossing. Henry R. Smith, plaintiff's superintendent and general manager, who drove the car, lived in the vicinity and was familiar with the location of the road and railroad.
McCalmont road runs parallel with defendant's railroad *167 for about 300 feet, on a somewhat lower level. At a point about 145 feet from the crossing the road starts to slope up the hill and crosses the railroad at a sharply acute angle. To the left1 of this crossing the railroad begins a convex curve towards the south, around the base of a hill, a ten-foot embankment supporting the track.
On the morning of February 14, 1940, about 7:10 o'clock, Mr. Smith was driving plaintiff's Chevrolet coupe on the McCalmont road on plaintiff's business in the direction of this crossing. Mr. Smith said, "It was enough daylight that you didn't need lights on", and he had none on. It had snowed during the night and was still snowing. The snow was eight to ten inches deep and no track had been broken on the road at this point. He had chains on the rear wheels. He stopped his car at a point 145 feet from the crossing, where the upward slope began, and looked and listened. The windows of his car were closed, but the "ventilator window" in the door on each side was openslightly. Where he stopped, the road was about nine or ten feet lower than the railroad. He could see the railroad to the right of the crossing for about 200 feet. He could see scarcely any of it to the left of the crossing. He went into low gear and drove up the slope at about five miles an hour. There was a comparatively level place just before the road crossed the railroad, but he did not stop there. At the crossing one could see the railroad to his right for about 150 feet, and for about the same distance to his left. The reason Mr. Smith gave for not stopping again before he came to the railroad track was that he was afraid his car would stall. He continued on his way, looking through the glass in the door as he *168 went, but as he entered on the track, because of the snow, he could see only about fifty feet.2 He heard no bell or whistle. When his front wheels were in the center of the railroad track, he was hit by a train coming from his right — traveling from Butler to Pittsburgh — which dragged or pushed his coupe for some distance on the track and it then went down a ten-foot embankment about fifty feet from the crossing.
There was no testimony that the place where Mr. Smith stopped, looked and listened was the usual or customary place for doing so; there could not be, for from that point there was practically no view of the railroad to the left of the crossing. The railroad crossing sign was on the level space at the top of the slope. On direct examination Mr. Smith testified: "Q. Mr. Smith, would you have a better view of a train coming from Butler towards this crossing at the point you stopped or a better view up near the track? A. You have a better view nearer the track" (p. 53a).
The rule requiring one to stop, look and listen before crossing a railroad track is an unbending one and it is complied with only where the stop is made at a point from which the driver can reasonably discover whether a train is approaching — "Stopping where one cannot see is little better than not stopping at all" (Craig v. Penna. R. Co.,
While plaintiff's driver traveled 145 feet up the slope, in low gear, at five miles an hour, a train going twenty to thirty miles an hour would cover 600 to 900 feet, so that when the driver stopped, looked and listened the train might easily have been 400 to 700 feet beyond his view. To attempt a crossing of the railroad, in such circumstances, without stopping again, although a better view was obtainable as he got nearer the crossing, is negligence per se, as matter of law: Hill v.Penna. R. Co.,
The case of Usher v. Pittsburgh Lake Erie R.R. Co.,
The motion to quash is refused. The assignments of error are sustained. The order of the court below is reversed and judgment is now entered, on the whole record, in favor of the defendant.