88 Pa. Super. 361 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued April 15, 1926.
Defendant appeals from judgment on a verdict in a suit for personal injuries. Between 7 and 8 o'clock on a rainy evening, December 4, 1920, defendant was driving a car southward on Jefferson Street in the City of New Castle. While crossing North Street, and apparently as he passed the line of the southern *363
footway crossing, he, for the first time, realized that he had collided with some object; he had struck the plaintiff, who, unconscious, was lying some short distance behind his car. There is evidence that before plaintiff started to cross the street and also while crossing, she looked for approaching vehicles in the direction from which the defendant came but saw none. There was a conflict in the evidence as to whether he sounded his horn for the North Street crossing, or whether the only warning given was for Falls Street crossing — the street next above North Street. Defendant testified that though his lights were lighted, he did not see anyone crossing in front of him. In the circumstances so described, the duty of determining whether he made the street crossing and approached the south footway crossing with due regard for the rights of pedestrians who might be using it, was for the jury: Healy v. Shedaker,
But there was reversible error in affirming plaintiff's second point for charge, — as follows: "The driver of an automobile at night is bound to greater care than in the daytime, because of the inability of pedestrians to see his approach, and if he neglects to operate his machine so as to avoid striking a pedestrian it is for the jury to determine whether he operated the machine with due care." We understand the word "neglects" in that point to mean omits. It is not the law that a driver at night is responsible for every collision with a pedestrian; the collision may be the result of the contributory negligence of the pedestrian; it may be an accident for which neither is responsible; of course a driver is liable if the collision results from his failure to operate with the care required by the circumstances and if the plaintiff is not negligent.
As the case goes back for retrial, we note that *364
there is some basis for appellant's complaint that the charge on the subject of contributory negligence was perhaps confusing to the jury; we need not discuss it in detail; it is sufficient to call attention to the rule: "The doctrine of comparative negligence has not been recognized in our State; [unless applying the federal statute: Waina v. Penna. Co.,
There can be no balancing or matching of degrees of negligence. This has been held so rigidly that in Monongahela City v. Fischer,
Judgment reversed and a new trial awarded.