Opinion by
In this action of trespass for damages arising out of a collision between defendant’s truck and the automobile owned and driven by plaintiff, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff. These are appeals by both plaintiff and defendant, the former from an award of new trial, and the latter from refusal of judgment n.o.v.
In granting a new trial the court assigned as its reason that “the verdict is against the weight of the evidence . . . and interests of justice require a new trial.” It refused judgment n.o.v. because the conflict of testimony as to negligence and contributory negligence was such that the questions were solely for the jury to determine.
According to plaintiff, he was travelling westerly in the northern-most lane of a 4-lane, 40-foot highway in the borough of Luzerne, at about 4:30 in the afternoon. At the point of collision the roadway was wet, and the speed limit was 25 miles per hour. After stopping in the far lane, he turned southerly, in a diagonal manner, to enter the premises of a glass company. Upon reaching the third lane he stopped to permit traffic to clear, looked both ways, saw nothing approaching, and proceeded to cross. He stated that he had an unobstructed view of 800 feet. As his front wheels were at the curb on the southern side of the highway, he was struck on his right by defendant’s truck, which was travelling easterly on the highway. The impact moved his car easterly about 20 feet and damaged it to such an extent that it was good only *254 for salvage. Plaintiff was thrown another 15 feet beyond his ear. He was unable to give any further details, either as to defendant’s speed, position, or actions. (He did offer opinion evidence that the truck weighed 12 to 15 tons).
Defendant offered the testimony of its driver and six disinterested witnesses that plaintiff drove from a private driveway on the northerly side, suddenly and without warning, directly into the path of defendant’s truck. (It also gave testimony that the truck weighed less than six tons).
As will be noted from the abbreviated statement of the testimony, plaintiff’s case depends on circumstantial evidence of negligence of defendant. If believed by the jury, however, it is sufficient to found a verdict thereon:
Neff v. Firth,
An order awarding new trial will not be reversed unless palpable abuse of discretion by the trial judge is disclosed, or unless an erroneous rule of law controlling the outcome is certified by the trial judge as the sole reason for his action:
Foster v. Waybright,
Order affirmed.
