269 Pa. 439 | Pa. | 1921
Opinion by
While crossing the street in front of a trolley car from which he had just alighted, plaintiff was struck by de
Two questions are involved in the case. First, refusal of the trial judge to give binding instructions for defendant on the ground of plaintiff’s negligence; second, refusal to withdraw a juror and continue the case because of remarks made by plaintiff’s counsel in his closing address to the jury.
The car on which plaintiff had been a passenger ran northward on Eighteenth street, in the City of Philadelphia, and stopped on the south side of Wharton street to discharge passengers. Plaintiff, according to his own testimony, stepped from the car .and immediately walking around in front of it and across the track, intended to board a car running eastward on Wharton street which had stopped to discharge and receive passengers. Defendant’s automobile approached from the rear and on the left side of the trolley car from which plaintiff alighted, passing it without warning and striking plaintiff as he proceeded across the street toward the Wharton street car. There was evidence that the automobile approached and passed the Eighteenth street car at the rate of thirty miles an hour, also that plaintiff was the second passenger to alight from the car and that others followed him. On behalf of defendant, evidence was offered to the effect that the automobile came to a stop with the trolley car and moved forward “almost even with it” before plaintiff started to cross the street, from which defendant contends the accident was due to plaintiff’s fault in attempting to cross in front of the moving trolley. Under this conflicting evidence the questions of negligence of the driver of the automobile and contributory negligence of plaintiff were necessarily for the jury.
With respect to the remarks made by plaintiff’s counsel in his address to the jury the evidence is contradic
The judgment is reversed with a new venire.