54 A.2d 89 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1947
Argued April 23, 1947. Appellants challenge a judgment upon a verdict in trespass for damages resulting to plaintiff's automobile in a collision. Their assignments of error complain of the refusal of the court below to grant a new trial and rulings upon objections to evidence. The court below dismissed their motion for judgment n.o.v. because no point for binding instructions had been presented at the trial, and its action is not assigned as error. The assigned rulings on the evidence are not within the scope of appellants' statement of the questions involved in this appeal, and were not pressed at the argument. Nevertheless we have examined them and, without specific reference to them, we may at once state that they possess no merit.
I. A motion for a new trial is directed to the sound discretion of the court below, and on appeal the only question reviewed is whether it properly exercised that discretion. The refusal of a new trial will be reversed only upon a showing that the court manifestly abused its discretion. Nark v. Horton Motor Lines,
II. The question of contributory negligence was clearly for the jury. The collision occurred on a through state highway upon which plaintiff's servant was driving his truck at about twenty-five miles an hour. Defendants' driver entered the highway from a road marked with an official "Through Traffic Stop" sign without stopping. His explanation was that as he applied his brakes in order to stop, his truck skidded into the highway. The view of plaintiff's driver of the intersection was obstructed by two buildings at the corner, and he first saw the approaching truck when he was about 10 to 12 feet from the intersection. At that moment defendants' truck was "right at the intersection, coming out." Had plaintiff's driver stopped the collision might have been avoided, but he testified that he assumed that the defendants' truck would stop. He had a right to assume that defendants' servant would perform his statutory duty to stop.Rowles v. Evanuik,
III. Plaintiff recovered $516.54 for the cost of the repairs to his truck and $1788.00 for the hire of a substitute truck until the repairs were completed, and the items allowed in the verdict were in exact accord with the undisputed evidence. Various objections have been made to the award, some of which were not presented to the court below at or after the trial, and most of which may be almost summarily dismissed.
The proposition, founded upon decisions by the courts of other states, that plaintiff's recovery was limited to the damages to his truck, is not tenable in Pennsylvania. Bauer v. Armour Co.,
The argument, also drawn from cases in other jurisdictions, that plaintiff was obliged to prove the value of his truck before and after the accident, does not have support in Pennsylvania. The correct measure of damages is laid down in the Restatement, Torts, section 928: "Where a person is entitled to a judgment for harm to chattels not amounting to a total destruction in value, the damages include compensation for (a) the difference *320
between the value of the chattel before the harm and the value after the harm or, at the plaintiff's election, the reasonable cost of repair or restoration where feasible, with due allowance for any difference between the original value and the value after repairs, and (b) the loss of use." This is fair distillation of our cases. See Bauer v. Armour Co., supra; Price v. Newell,
Relying upon Bauer v. Armour Co., supra, where the expenses of operating a hired automobile such as gasoline and oil were not approved as recoverable items, appellants argue that thedepreciation suffered by the truck which defendant hired was also an expense item, and should have been deducted. The truck was hired for 149 working days at $1.00 per hour, and this was shown to be the reasonable rental value of a truck in the locality. In the calculation of that price there was probably included an amount to cover depreciation. But whether so or not, that was the price plaintiff was obliged to pay, and if it included depreciation, or even a profit to the owner, plaintiff could recover that price, provided it was not in excess of the reasonable rental value. Restatement, Torts, section 931.
IV. The accident occurred on October 16, 1943, and the repairs were not completed until April 8, 1944, a total of 149 working days. Appellants' principal objection is that there is no evidence to show that 149 days were required for the repairs. Since the verdict includes the rental value of the hired truck for the period of 149 days, there is substance to this point. But, concerning it, a comment by President Judge TREXLER in Chubbv. Zentz,
V. Had timely objection been made it is very likely that plaintiff would have supplied evidence to show that during that period repair materials and parts were under governmental control and could be obtained only after long delays and under great difficulties. This was a matter of common knowledge, of "every-day knowledge, which everyone of average intelligence and knowledge of things about him can be presumed to know": Piersonv. London,
Judgment affirmed. *323