100 Pa. Super. 348 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued December 8, 1930. This action was started in the court below by John M. Hastings for injuries he received in a collision between his Ford sedan and defendant's trolley car. Hastings, who was 60 years of age, died prior to the trial and the pleadings were amended by substituting the present plaintiff. Verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and the learned court below refused a motion for judgment for the defendant, n.o.v., and this appeal followed.
On the 23d of July, 1927, about six o'clock in the evening, the defendant's car was proceeding northward at a very moderate rate of speed, in the Borough of Stockertown. The motorman of the defendant company saw Hastings' car pass a parked car about 270 feet away and continue toward the oncoming trolley. When Hastings got within 150 feet of the trolley, the two left wheels of his car were on the trolley rails which were flush with the street and the remainder of the machine was to the right of the track. The plaintiff's witness, a passenger in the car, said that *350 he saw, at that distance, the wheels of the motor car "wobble" as the driver unsuccessfully endeavored to get out of the rails which were slippery owing to a recent rain. This witness said to the motorman when the trolley reached a point 25 to 30 feet from the motor car, "Man, why the Hell don't you stop the car and leave the man pass you?" The motorman admitted that he saw the automobile sliding along the rails and that he was watching and waiting for the driver to extricate his car, expecting him to get off the tracks at any minute. Instead of the motorman stopping the trolley car, which he said he could have done as it was under complete control, thus avoiding the accident, he continued going, and a collision resulted.
This case does not come under the principle laid down in Uhler v. Leh. Val. Transit Co.,
We recognize the principle that under ordinary circumstances an automobile in motion is presumed to be under control, but in the case at bar, the presumption was overcome as the motorman saw the ineffectual efforts made by the driver to divert his car from the trolley tracks. He, apparently, was just as helpless to extricate himself as the plaintiff in Friedland v. A. L.V.E. Rwy.,
In Hope v. Sou. Pa. Tract. Co.,
In the case of Davidson v. Schuylkill Tract. Co.,
We quite agree with the appellant that it was not incumbent upon the motorman to stop when he saw Hastings' car 270 feet away. He could properly have assumed that Hastings would turn off the tracks, but when Hastings was 25 to 30 feet away and the motorman saw that he was trying, and was unable, to get off the rail, a different situation confronted him.
The appellant calls our attention to Beaumont v. Beaver Val. Tract. Co.,
The negligence complained of in the case at bar is that the motorman failed to stop his car when it was within his power to do so. Whether or not this accident *353
could have been avoided by exercising due care was, in our judgment, a question for the jury. Hastings went on the tracks when he was within his legal rights to do so and within a reasonable time after he saw the car approaching, he tried to discharge his duty of getting off the tracks. It could fairly be assumed that he momentarily expected to be successful. Whether or not, in the light of prevailing conditions, Hastings should have stopped and endeavored to signal the car was for the jury: Sieb v. Pa. Tract. Co.,
The learned court below very fairly and clearly submitted the questions involved to the jury, and a careful review of the record and a consideration of the arguments of able counsel lead us to the conclusion that the assignments of error are without merit.
Judgment is affirmed.