Opinion by
Aрpellant with his family was driving at the rate of twenty to twenty-five miles per hour on a road fourteen feet in width with berms measuring two feet on each *238 side. Approaching a sharp right curve with the view obstructed, hе slowed down to about fifteen miles per hour, and, on negotiating the curve, was confronted by aрpellee’s truck less than sixty feet away, occupying the center of the road instead of its оwn side. Due to the narrowness of the road and the width of appellee’s vehicle, appellant was unable to pass, and a violent collision resulted some fifty feet beyond the curve. The jury rеsolved all questions in appellant’s favor, but the court below held appellant guilty of contributоry negligence as a matter of law, stating “It was his duty to so drive his car that when he turned the curve he cоuld stop it within that distance necessary to avoid a collision with what might suddenly loom up in front of him in the roаd after he had come around the curve.”
This conclusion was based upon the doctrine of
Cormican et al. v. Menke et al.,
Appellant was not under a duty to anticipate that the driver of a vehicle coming in the opposite direction around the curve would occupy the center of the highway in violation of the law of the road.
2
As stated in
Shellenberger et al. v. Reading Transportation Co.,
Moreover, еven if the doctrine of “assured clear distance ahead” were applicable to these facts, appellant would not be foreclosed thereby. There is no evidence
*240
that Ms “assured clear distance ahead” was shorter than sixty feet, and the doctrine does not require him tо be able to stop within a shorter distance. Since the truck was approaching him at a substantial rate of speed and the collision resulted fifty feet from the curve, it can not be held as a mаtter of law that appellant was driving at such a rate of speed as would not enable him to stop at a distance of sixty feet. The question of contributory negligence was properly submitted tо the jury. It was likewise for that body to determine whether the truck driver’s negligence was the proximate сause of the injury. In view of the verdict, the argument that the causal connection was broken by appellant’s intervening negligence fails. See
Goldschmidt et ux. v. Schumann et al.,
The position of the vehicles after the acсident does not under the circumstances render appellant’s version of the collision incredible. The rule as to incontrovertible physical facts is applicable only where the faсts are positive, clear, indisputable and certain.
4
Here the location of the vehicles was disputed and not at all free from doubt. Moreover, even from the position of the cars, it is quite possible that the accident could happen as the jury believed. See
Czarniecki v. Jesse C. Stewart Co.,
Judgment reversed аnd here entered for appellant on the verdict unless the court below reinstates the motion for new trial within ten days.
Notes
To the eases cited
(Filer v. Filer,
See
Todd et al. v. Nesta,
See footnote 1.
Hartig v. American Ice Co.,
