157 A. 321 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1931
Argued September 30, 1931. This is an action of trespass against the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company arising out of the following occurrence.
On December 28, 1929, about 6:30 P.M., plaintiff was driving his automobile south on Croskey Street intending to turn west into Snyder Avenue. Snyder Avenue has a double line of trolley tracks in its center with a roadway on each side of the street between the tracks and the curb. When plaintiff reached the avenue, he found a truck parked between the west bound trolley line and the near curb of Snyder Avenue, so, as he alleges, he could not turn west, there not being enough space to accommodate his car. There was a line of parked trolley cars, four or five on the west bound track, the track nearest to the plaintiff. The trolley cars so parked were lighted and the plaintiff's line of vision to his right was cut off. He slowed down his machine, passed the end of the line of standing trolley cars and proceeded until the front of his car was on the east bound trolley tracks, and looking to his right, saw a car a hundred feet away *234 approaching at a speed at what he estimated was twenty miles an hour. He tried to get off the track, but his "car wouldn't pick up." The trolley car struck him and the injuries to his person and property resulted which are the subjects of this suit.
A verdict for the plaintiff was sustained by the lower court on the ground that the plaintiff did everything that was required of him under the circumstances, that the parked trolley cars interfered with his vision and he could not see until he was on the track and when he was on the track, the trolley car which was a hundred feet away should have stopped and thus avoided the accident.
It was settled in the case of Smathers v. Pittsburgh Butler Street Rwy. Co.,
In Miller N. Broad St. Storage Co. v. P.R.T.,
In Smith v. Lehigh Valley Transit Co.,
The object of the rules just above referred to was to enable the traveller to ascertain the position and movement of the electric cars that he may avoid entering upon the track in case of danger: Gottlieb v. Scranton Rwy. Co.,
The judgment is reversed and is now entered in favor of the defendant.