139 Pa. 646 | Pa. | 1891
OPINION,
The testimony in this case is extremely meagre and unsatisfactory, but, such as it is, it is the testimony for the plaintiff, and we must pronounce upon it as we find it.
The plaintiff and another were driving eastward on Girard Avenue in a light open wagon. At Ninth street a train of cars was passing, and the wagon was stopped at the gate until the train had gone by. The plaintiff testified: “ After the gates were up, as we entered on the tracks, the horse became fright
In his cross-examination, the plaintiff said: “ By reason of the passing train, the horse started off at more than an ordinary gait. We were about fifteen feet from the transfer station when the horse shied. We were driving along the newly-paved part. The horse turned or shied, as you might call it, and when he tifrned, this place being much higher, the front wheels struck this part. I did not see the projected part before the accident.” The only other witness,-'the driver Sleesman, who testified to the actual facts of the accident, said: “ The gates went up. The horse started off. As he got down toward Eighth street he was going faster. As we got down to the waiting-room at Eighth and Girard Avenue, the horse, in turning to the right, struck something, I don’t know what. Whatever it was, it gave us a wrench. Mr. Johnston fell out. I was driving. I held on longer. I held on to the lines until I got across Eighth street, then I fell out.” It was admitted on the trial, by counsel, “ that the width of Girard Avenue from .curb to curb was eighty-four feet, and that the sides, for a distance of about twenty-two feet from each curb, were paved with cobble-stones, and that the centre of the street was paved with Belgian blocks, the part so paved being about forty feet in width.”
Upon the testimony, therefore, the accident occurred before reaching the transfer station; and, as the street was forty feet Avide except at the station, there was no question of negligence arising from the narrowness of the street. In point of fact the wagon, which was not upset, did go through the narrow passage without any collision, and the driver did not leave it until he had crossed Eighth street. This leaves only the question whether a well-paved street forty feet wide, with a rise on
Judgment affirmed.