73 Pa. Super. 238 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The action was brought by husband and wife to recover damages for personal injuries to the latter alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligent act of the defendants’ servant. After completing some purchases in a grocery store at the northwest corner of Master and Randolph streets in the City of Philadelphia, the wife carrying in her arms several packages and accompanied by her little boy, about six years of age, started to cross Master street from the north to the south side at the regular crossing place on that street. The width of the street from curb to curb is twenty-six feet. A street car line with a single track is in the middle of the street. If we assume the track to have occupied four feet in the width of the street there remained eleven feet of cartway on either side of the track. When the mother and child entered on the crossing the street was free from traffic and there was an unobstructed view in both directions save in so far and in so far only as it was prevented by a bread wagon standing on the street alongside the north curb. The mother and child passed behind the wagon and proceeded on their way over the crossing. Before leaving the curb she observed the autotruck driven by the defendants’ servant coming eastward towards the crossing at what she regarded as a low rate of speed. It was then distant from the crossing about one
The errors assigned complain only of the refusal of the learned trial judge to direct a verdict for the defendant and of the court thereafter in declining to enter judgment for the defendant n. o. v. The province of an appellate court in such cases is thus briefly stated by Mr. Justice Simpson in Toner v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., 263 Pa. 438: “The single question for us is, therefore: Was there sufficient evidence to carry the case to the jury, assuming all the facts and inferences favorable to the plaintiff are decided in his favor, and all those antagonistic to him rejected?” Tested by that rule, the above stated facts were established by the verdict of the jury.
Was there evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants’ driver? He was approaching a regular-street crossing and, therefore, was called upon to anticipate the presence of pedestrians. From the moment the mother and child emerged from the rear of the bread wagon on the north side of the street, their presence on the crossing and the fact they were committed to it, could have been plainly seen by the driver had he been exercising proper care. In Kuehne v. Brown, 257 Pa. 37, we have a case in its facts quite similar to the one at bar, except that there the child crossed the street at a point which was riot a regular crossing place. Mr. Justice
Should the court have declared as matter of law the mother was guilty of contributory negligence in making an effort to rescue her child from sudden peril. If the jury rightly determined that defendants’ car was driven in the manner testified to by the mother and recited in the above statement of facts, there was support for the inference that the sudden peril of the child was brought about by the negligence of the driver rather than by a wholly unexpected and not to be anticipated act on the part of the child. The present case is at once distinguishable upon its facts from Watson v. Highland Grove Traction Co., 68 Pa. Superior Ct. 332. The mother and child were in the exercise of their perfect right in crossing the
We are of opinion the case was correctly tried in the court below and that the judgment there entered should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.