Appellants contend that the introduction at trial of certain inadmissible evidence was not sufficiently prejudicial to appellee to warrant the granting of a new trial. We disagree and, accordingly, affirm the order of the lower court.
Q Officer, did you make any-any notes on your 86 form as to the contributing circumstances to this accident?
A Yes, sir, I did.
Q What were they?
A Ychicle number two [the designation given at trial to Mr. Buckley’s motorcycle] failed to yield the right of way.
Counsel for Ms. Kelly promptly requested the court to withdraw a juror and declare a mistrial. The court refused, but issued an instruction cautioning the jury to “ignore . . . Officer Cosgrove’s impressions . . . about things that he didn’t see.” A short time later Ms. Kelly called as a witness Officer William McDowell of the Philadelphia Police Department, another investigating officer who had not actually witnessed the accident. On cross-examination the following exchange occurred between counsel for the Cullens and Officer McDowell:
Q There was a citation issued to Mr. Buckley?
A Yes.
Counsel for Ms. Kelly again moved unsuccessfully for a mistrial, and the court cautioned the jury that they alone were charged with the duty of determining negligence in the case. After a five-day trial the jury returned a verdict
The Cullens contend that the introduction of the police officers’ testimony regarding the cause of the accident and the issuance of a traffic citation was not sufficiently prejudicial to warrant the granting of a new trial. It is well settled that “where a new trial is refused or granted, an Appellate Court will reverse only when there has been a clear abuse of discretion or an error of law which controlled the outcome of the case.”
Chesko v. Steinbaugh,
Common sense (and experience as well) tells us that to the average juror the decision of the investigating police officer, i.e., whether to charge one driver or the other with a traffic violation based upon the result of his investigation, is very material to, if not wholly dispositive of, that juror’s determination of fault on the part of the respective drivers. 5
Similarly, new trials have been granted in automobile accident cases in which investigating officers were permitted to state their opinions as to the causes of the accidents.
See Brodie
v.
Philadelphia Transportation Co.,
Order affirmed.
Notes
. The lower court reasoned that
[t]he evidence given by the police officers was highly prejudicial to the plaintiff, who was seeking a verdict against both defendants. The specific finding by the jury that defendant Deborah [sic] Cullen was not negligent cannot reasonably be said to be based wholly on admissible evidence. The effect of curative instructions with respect to two patently inadmissible and prejudicial statements is so speculative as to require a new trial.
Opinion of the lower court at 5.
. Neither Joseph E. Buckley nor the City of Philadelphia has participated in this appeal.
. The officer actually testified that a traffic summons had been issued as a result of the accident, but not to the defendant’s driver. The lower court then refused to let the officer testify that the summons had been issued to the plaintiff-driver. We noted that
the context in which the ruling was made inevitably implied that [the plaintiff-driver] had received a summons. By allowing the officer to testify that he had not issued a summons to [the defendant’s] driver, but not permitting him to testify whether he had issued one to [the plaintiff-driver], the court left little to challenge the deductive abilities of the jurors.
. The Court also held that the Act of April 29, 1959, P.L. 58, § 1211, 75 P.S. § 1211, rendered the officer’s testimony inadmissible. Section 1211 provided that evidence of a conviction for violation of the Vehicle Code was inadmissible “in every civil proceeding arising out of the same violation or under the same facts or circumstances.” 75 P.S. § 1211. See also Eastern Express, Inc. v. Food Haulers, Inc., supra. Section 1211 was repealed by the Act of June 17, 1976, P.L. 162, No. 81 § 7 (effective July 1, 1977), and consequently is inapplicable to the present case.
.
Cf. Gatling v. Rothman, supra,
