42 Pa. Super. 271 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The plaintiff’s appeal is from the judgment of the court below giving binding instructions for the defendant. The court assigned the contributory negligence of the plaintiff as the ground for this action. It is therefore necessary to consider the testimony introduced in the case. The plaintiff was employed as a teamster for a brewing company and was driving a team attached to a delivery wagon. The accident occurred between eleven and twelve o’clock in the forenoon at the. intersection of York and Tenth streets in the city of Philadelphia. The plaintiff was driving southwardly along the west side of the latter street, and the street car was moving westwardly along York street. Evidence was introduced tending to show that as the plaintiff approached the track
It is contended, however, that whether there was contributory negligence or not there was no evidence of the negligence of the defendant. We think, however, that this was also a question for the jury. There is evidence that the car was running at a high speed. This is not only shown by one or two of the witnesses, but the momentum with which it collided and the distance which it went after the collision tend to show that it crossed the street at an unusual speed, and when we observe that one of the plaintiff’s witnesses in the car saw the team close to the track when the car was 300 feet distant the presumption is that the car could have been stopped before the wagon was reached, especially as the crossing was a stopping place. Moreover, it appears in the evidence of one of the defendant’s witnesses that the power was only turned off when the car was about twenty feet from Tenth street. If the track
The judgment is, therefore, reversed with a venire facias de novo.