21 A.2d 465 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued May 1, 1941. This was an action of trespass brought by the guardian of a small child and by the child's parents to recover the damages sustained by them respectively, as a result of injuries inflicted on the child when she was knocked down by defendant's truck while playing on the public road on her way home from school. The child, who was six years old at the time of the accident, was badly hurt, both her femurs being fractured, in addition to bruises, contusions, etc., in consequence of which she suffered great pain and was confined in a hospital for nearly two months, and has a malformation of her legs, which unless corrected by treatment or operation will be permanent.
The jury returned verdicts (1) in favor of the child for $100, and (2) in favor of the parents for $400. The plaintiffs moved for a new trial because of the inadequacy of the verdicts. The defendant moved for judgment non obstante veredicto. The court refused judgment non obstante veredicto for the defendant but granted a new trial because of the inadequacy of the verdict for the child. Defendant appealed. *407
The case was a close one on the facts, but we are not satisfied that the testimony was such as to require the court below to hold defendant's driver free of negligence as matter of law. The injured child, her brother then seven years old, and another boy, Bobby Somers, also seven years old, were on their way home from school shortly before noon on a clear day, and were walking, running and playing along the road, paved with cement, sixteen feet wide, with good-sized earth berms or spaces on each side of the paved road. The neighborhood was sparsely settled and the traffic inconsiderable. No other automobiles were then on the road. The children were going in single file on the concrete road towards the direction from which the defendant's car was coming, and on their left side of the road, that is, the defendant's right side. They were playing and in the course of it ran across the road and back, and were plainly in view of defendant's driver for nearly six hundred feet. The latter testified that he had been traveling twenty or twenty-five miles an hour going up hill, but picked up speed when he got over the top of the hill, to where the road was practically level — just a slight down grade — when he saw the children coming; that his car had a governor on that prevented his going faster than thirty-five or thirty-eight miles an hour; that as he got near the children he slowed down his truck "a little" and pulled over to the center of the road "to avoid any mishappening which I thought might happen"; that as he was thus proceeding the little girl, apparently in response to some playful gesture by one of the boys, ran across the road; and that he applied his brakes but could not stop in time to avoid hitting her. There is no testimony in the case that he was traveling at an undue or unlawful speed for ordinary circumstances, but having in mind the tendency of small children, while playing, to be heedless of approaching traffic, the jury may well have concluded that the driver should have slowed down his speed more than *408
"a little" while nearing and passing the children and reduced the speed to such an extent that he could stop the truck immediately
if one of them should run across the road, and thus avoid all possible danger to them likely to happen because of their natural heedlessness, and that the results of this accident showed that he did not slow down his speed sufficiently in view of the circumstances. The driver of an automobile is not held negligent if a small child suddenly darts into view and gets into the path of the automobile and is hit; but where several small children are playing along a road in full view, for quite a distance, of an approaching automobile, the driver must be on the lookout for unexpected and heedless conduct on their part and should slow down his car and have it under such control as to avoid any serious injury to them resulting from their heedlessness: Lucasv. Bushko,
The granting of a new trial for inadequacy of the verdict is a matter for the sound discretion of the court below and its action will not be reversed except for a clear abuse of such discretion:Schwartz v. Jaffe,
Considering the extent of her injuries, if the minor child was entitled to recover at all, a verdict for $100 was grossly inadequate.
While, in the light of our decision in Ehrlich v. Stiefel,
The orders of the court below refusing judgment non obstante veredicto for the defendant and granting a new trial to the plaintiff, are affirmed.