230 Pa. 1 | Pa. | 1911
Opinion by
By resolving all doubts and drawing all inferences in favor of the plaintiff, the jury could have found the following material facts: The accident happened in the city of Pittsburg on April 11, 1907 at about 7: 45 a. m. The morning was dark and foggy. The plaintiff and her sister walked down Berwick street to its intersection with the defendant’s railroad on Second avenue. They desired
The plaintiff testified that after crossing the railroad she looked carefully to see that no train was approaching, and saw none; that she did not then consider the place in which she was standing a dangerous one; and that
The statement avers: “Plaintiff alleges that she was standing at the place aforesaid, in readiness to board the said street car, she was suddenly confronted by the engine of the defendant company which was running at a high and negligent rate of speed, which sounded no bell and gave no warning of its approach. Which engine was negligently or carelessly operated by the defendant or its agents; and plaintiff did not realize that said engine was coming until it was almost upon her and within a short distance of where plaintiff was standing looking for the approaching street car . . . ., when she was suddenly struck by said engine. . . .” The statement also avers that the place where she stopped was the “regular stopping place for persons intending to board street cars,” afid the place where she crossed the tracks was “a regular railroad crossing, and has been used as such for twenty-five years or more by the citizens of that community, which fact was well known to the plaintiff company,
Defendant produced witnesses to show that the plaintiff was struck by the trolley car and not by the train; that it had given due warning by bells and whistles in approaching the crossing; that the plaintiff could have seen the train in ample time to avoid it had she been looking; and that the train was not running at more then six miles an hour. It proved a statement of the plaintiff, the making of which was not denied by her, to the effect that she saw the railroad train coming before she started to cross the tracks. The defendant contended that it was not guilty of any negligence and that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The issues were submitted to the jury and they found against the defendant.
There are 'several specifications of error, but it is only necessary to pass upon the second to the effect that the court erred in not directing a verdict for the defendant. Under this assignment we will consider the question of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.
In order to justify the court in treating the question of contributory negligence as one of law, not only the facts but the inferences to be drawn from them must be free from doubt. On the other hand, when it is inconceivable that any two minds could rationally draw more than one conclusion from the established facts, then a decision contrary to such conclusion is merely capricious and cannot be sustained. In this case the plaintiff succeeded in crossing the railroad without injury, and after reaching what she claimed to be a place of apparent safety was struck by a train. This space between the tracks, less than seven feet in width, may have been a
The second assignment of error is sustained; the judgment is reversed and is here entered for the defendant.