57 Pa. Super. 386 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1914
Opinion by
In determining whether or not the learned trial judge should have withdrawn this case from the consideration of the jury and whether this court should now reverse the judgment that followed the verdict for the plaintiff, we accept the facts as testified to by the plaintiff. If, as to some of these, the testimony before the jury was conflicting, that is not a matter which here and now concerns us.
The road of the defendant township on which the accident occurred is about a mile in length and connects two more important and traveled highways known respectively as Grantham road and Lisburn road. The plaintiff was a mail carrier in the service of the government and his duties ordinarily required him to traverse the road in question every day for the delivery of mail to at least two citizens residing thereon. In the performance of his duties he traveled in a small runabout motor
It was of course the duty of the supervisors to proceed at once to repair the dangerous defect in the highway. If, in the exercise of their discretion, they deemed it prudent to close the short road at both ends, no one could or does complain that this would be a breach of duty on their part, but their right to close the road does not relieve them from' responsibility for the exercise of that right in a careless or negligent manner. As' we have seen, the plaintiff passed the defect in the road on the 22d and found no obstruction at the Lisburn end of it. He again passed the defect and the township’s officers working there on the morning of the 23d, and was not warned that a rope was stretched across the exit of that road nearly a mile away. The rope itself was small; it was suspended from three to four feet above the surface of the ground. The plaintiff testifies he was exercising care in driving his machine and did not see the rope. There was no warning by any more substantial or visible barricade, by notice or otherwise, that the rope was there. Could a court declare, as a matter of law, that if the plaintiff had exercised reasonable care he must have seen the rope? We cannot think so. The conclusion that he did see it, in the face of his testimony to the contrary, is by no means the unavoidable and necessary inference to be drawn from his testimony. Clearly, if the supervisors, in the exercise of their right to close the road, had stretched one or more strands of
The decisions of the courts in what are commonly called “negligence cases” are beyond enumeration and it is useless to attempt to review and analyze them in each recurring case. The same principles are reiterated in all of them and the real question in every such case is the application of those well-understood principles to the established facts. We have examined with care all of the many cases cited in the able brief filed by appellant’s counsel, and we are satisfied no one of them can be said to control the present case and necessarily lead to the conclusion urged upon us by the appellant. Certainly in our view the case at bar presents in the facts, as we have stated them, many points of difference from Canavan v. Oil City, 183 Pa. 611, and Martin v. Williamsport, 208 Pa. 590. If any case of all those cited may fairly be considered as closely resembling the one at bar, it would be Martin v. Williamsport, supra. In that case the accident occurred along a street devoted exclusively to residential purposes. The ordinary foot travel along it was amply provided for without the use of the entire space of the sidewalk. It had been the custom of the citizens for years to decorate and beautify a small portion of the legal sidewalk with trees, grass, shrubbery and flowers. To protect these, small uprights extended along the side of the walk and wire was stretched on these uprights. The plaintiff.
It is clear enough the mere fact the plaintiff was a
Again the learned trial judge could not have said, as matter of law, that because there was another road which the plaintiff knew, he was obliged to take that road, and could not recover because he did not. There is no such broad principle controlling cases of this character as is stated in the defendant's seventh point, eighth assignment of error: Steck v. Allegheny, 213 Pa. 573; McManamon v. Hanover Twp., 232 Pa. 439; Miller v. Montgomery Boro., 39 Pa. Super. Ct. 597. The remaining assignments of error raise no question which invites any particular discussion and they are all overruled.
Judgment affirmed.