Opinion by
This is a trespass action by Betty Lear, Administratrix of the Estate of Theodore F. Lear, deceased, to recover damages under the wrongful death act 1 and the survival act, 2 arising from the death of her husband, Theodore F. Lear, out of an accident allegedly caused by the negligence of defendant’s employe, Melvin Seiger.
The accident occurred just before dawn on an August morning in 1956, on Route 11 near Hunlock Creek, Luzerne County. Route 11 is a three lane concrete highway and runs in a general north-south direc *147 tion. The concrete portion of the highway is 33 feet wide and the berm on the right hand side of the highway adjacent to the northbound lane is 20 feet wide. Lear was driving a tractor-trailer unit in a northward direction and Seiger was driving a tractor-trailer unit, carrying heavy road machinery, in a southward direction. Plaintiff’s testimony consisted only of evidence given by a state police officer who made an investigation and the introduction into evidence of three photographs taken by the police very shortly after the accident. The defendant presented no evidence at all. The Trial Judge directed a verdict in favor of defendant, a motion for new trial was dismissed by the court en banc, and judgment was entered on the verdict.
We learn from the opinion of the court below that the evidence and the photographs show:
“1. That there is a clear view of between two hundred and three hundred yards in either direction from the scene of the accident along the highway.
2. The weather was clear, the highway dry.
3. That about fifty feet from the point of impact, defendant’s vehicle was in its right-hand lane.
4. The defendant’s vehicle suddenly and abruptly turned to the left at about a forty-five degree angle, went across the road and into the berm approximately eighteen feet, the tractor extending into the berm while the trailer occupied the East and center lane; both sections were aligned and facing in a southeasterly direction. His right-hand lane was now clear.
5. Impact damage was centered just ahead of the right front wheel.
6. Defendant’s vehicle left a tire mark in the pave[ment] starting in the right-hand lane and arcing forty-three and one-half (43%) feet in a curve to defendant’s right rear wheel, where, after the accident, it stood at rest in the center lane.
*148 7. Defendant’s trailer, a flat car in effect, was freighting what appears to be a heavy road grader and tractor, which load apparently shifted to the right at the time of the accident.
8. The vehicle driven by the victim appears to have received the impact head-on; the damage was centered directly in front.
9. The crushed tractor or cab of decedent was jack-knifed back to a right angle or more in relation to its trailer. He had been traveling North, now the tractor faced southeast, roughly parallel with defendant’s vehicle. It occupied the driver’s left half of his right-hand lane.
10. Skid marks of eight to ten feet from left to right across the highway and traced to his wheels indicated that the tractor or cab of decedent’s vehicle was in the center lane at the time of impact.
11. Decedent’s trailer also large, closed in and loaded with mail, lay diagonally in the highway, its front in the center lane heading Northeast, its rear extending into the West or its left-hand lane to a point two and one-half feet from its left-hand berm.
12. There were no skid marks, no tire marks at the rear wheels.
13. The debris was generally in the center lane.
14. There is no evidence of any other vehicles in the area.”
It is conceded of course, as it must be, that plaintiff is entitled not only to the benefit of every fact and every inference that may reasonably be deduced from the evidence,
Smith v. Pachter,
*149
This presumption of due care, however, may be rebutted in the plaintiff’s own case or in the defendant’s case. If it is rebutted in the plaintiff’s case it justifies a binding direction against the plaintiff,
Griffith v. Wiener,
This presumption of due care does not constitute proof that the defendant was negligent.
Duda, Admrx. v. Carothers,
It is true that this statement of the rule was based upon precedent authority,
3
but sometimes in the same cases,
4
notably in Ebersole,
5
we have stated a different rule. We said in
Mull v. Bothwell,
The “only reasonable inference” test does have proper application in negligence cases. Although plaintiff may be declared contributorily negligent as a matter of law this may not be done simply because, in the opinion of the Trial Judge, the inference of his own negligence “outweighs” the evidence or presumption of due care. It may be done only where the “only reasonable inference” of the evidence in plaintiff’s own case shows want of due care. Similarly, the negligence of defendant may be declared as a matter of law but only where the “only reasonable inference” of defendant’s own evidence shows his negligence. This is so in both those instances because although the evidence is oral there is no question of credibility presented.
In
Benner v. Weaver,
The court below, in its opinion, gives a good analysis of what might well have happened. That analysis would support the defendant’s contention that the plaintiff was contributorily negligent and that he was not negligent. Under the only reasonable inference test the court would have been justified in withdrawing this case from the jury. The difficulty with the application of its analysis to the true rule is that such analysis is the function of the jury and not of the court. A plaintiff is entitled to have his case considered by the jury even though he does not show that the only reasonable inference is that defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the accident. It is enough that he produces evidence which may properly be found by the jury to justify an inference that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the accident because such evidence outweighs even though it does not exclude an inference that the defendant was not negligent or that his negligence was not the proximate cause of the accident. When the evidence is so viewed we are constrained to reverse the judgment of the court below and award a new trial.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.
Notes
Act of April 15, 1851, P. L. 689, §19, as amended, 12 P.S. §1601.
Act of April 18, 1949, P. L. 512, §§801 and 603, 20 P.S. §320.601, et seq.
Connor v. Hawk, 387 Pa.
480,
Stauffer v. Railway Express Agency,
In Elersole we also said “The evidence is insufficient to warrant recovery if it fails to describe, picture or visualize what actually happened sufficiently to enable the fact-finding tribunal reasonably to conclude that the defendant was guilty of negligence and that his negligence was the proximate cause of the accident.”
