274 Pa. 87 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Plaintiff sued for damages for personal injuries caused in a collision with defendant’s automobile, while passing from a trolley car, from which he alighted on
Plaintiff, a passenger on a trolley car running north on Thirteenth Street, in the City of Philadelphia, left the car at Chestnut Street. Owing to the congested condition of the two streets at this point customarily passengers from two or more cars are discharged at the same time, making it necessary for those leaving the second and later cars to alight a short distance below Chestnut Street and toward the middle of the square. On this occasion the car in which plaintiff was a passenger, the fourth in the line of those at the time held up at the corner, stopped 174 feet below Chestnut Street and the conductor called “all out for Chestnut.” Three other passengers left the car ahead of plaintiff and, finding the roadway between the car track and sidewalk occupied by automobiles and wagons on the east or right-hand side, passed in front of the car to reach the sidewalk on the west or left side of the street, a distance of 10.4 feet from the west rail of the trolley track. The three persons ahead of plaintiff reached the sidewalk in safety. Plaintiff testified that after passing in front of the car he looked south and saw defendant’s automobile coming “about five yards below Sansom Street,” which, according to other evidence offered, was approximately 115 feet from the place where he stood, and traveling north on the west or left side of the street, at from twenty-five to thirty miles an hour. Plaintiff proceeded to cross the roadway and was struck by the automobile as he was stepping on the sidewalk. There was nothing
Under the foregoing testimony it cannot be said as a matter of law that plaintiff was negligent. Having alighted from the car at the invitation of the conductor, it was not only his right but his duty to reach the sidewalk as expeditiously as possible, having due regard to the traffic conditions on the street. Finding the way on the right-hand side blocked by traffic and the left-hand side of the street clear, he was justified in passing around the front of the standing trolley to reach the opposite sidewalk. In doing so it was his duty to look for approaching vehicles and otherwise exercise such care for his personal safety as the situation demanded. The mere fact that he saw defendant’s automobile approaching on the left side of the street at a distance of 115 feet, when but ten or eleven feet of roadway intervened between the trolley track and the sidewalk, does not justify the legal conclusion of negligence on his part in starting toward the sidewalk. It was for the jury to say whether the danger was so imminent that a reasonably prudent man would not have ventured ahead: Anderson v. Wood, 264 Pa. 98; Joyce v. Smith, 269 Pa. 439.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.