65 A.2d 689 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1949
Argued March 15, 1949. James F. Favino instituted this action in trespass against Eleanora B. Myers to recover $242.06, representing the cost of repairs to his Ford dump truck occasioned *447 by a right-angle collision at a street intersection between said truck and the motor vehicle of the defendant. At the close of the testimony, the court below affirmed defendant's point for binding instructions on the ground that plaintiff's operator was contributorily negligent as a matter of law and directed a verdict for defendant. From the dismissal of plaintiff's motion for a new trial, this appeal followed.
That the judgment must be affirmed will become apparent after a brief statement of the pertinent facts viewed most favorably for the plaintiff. On August 8, 1945, at about 10:30 a.m., Veryle E. Daugherty, plaintiff's operator, was driving a dump truck, containing a five ton load of stone, in a westerly direction on Pennsylvania Avenue, at a speed of ten to fifteen miles per hour, toward the intersection with Hawthorne Street in the City of York. Defendant was proceeding in a northerly direction along Hawthorne Street, at a speed not disclosed by the record. Neither street is a through street nor is traffic thereon controlled by lights or signs. At the time of the collision the weather was clear and the streets were dry. Daugherty testified that as he entered the intersection, he looked to his left and to his right, and ". . . [having] seen nothing, so I kept on going"; that he then started through the intersection without again looking tohis left; that as he was proceeding through the intersection he saw for the first time the car of the defendant ". . . coming up on my left . . . coming through the intersection . . . almost on me"; that although he had unobstructed vision for a full city block south on Hawthorne Street,1 the direction from which the Myers car was approaching, he did not see the Myers car until it was almost directly in *448 front of his truck and although he immediately applied the brakes he was unable to avoid the collision.
"The operator of a motor vehicle must, at all times, exercise reasonable care in the circumstances. He must have his car under such control that it can be stopped before doing injury to any person or thing in any situation reasonably apt to arise in the circumstances": LeMara v. Adam,
As stated in Webb v. Hess,
Judgment affirmed.