157 A. 339 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1931
Argued April 22, 1931. Husband and wife claimed damages for injuries to the wife resulting from defendant's alleged negligent *583 driving an automobile. The jury returned a verdict for the wife but, somewhat inconsistently, found for defendant in the husband's case. The learned court below entered judgment for the defendant notwithstanding the verdict for the wife; she has appealed, — he has not.
The accident happened in the borough of Petrolia at 11 A.M. on a clear August day. In the opinion filed under Rule 58, the learned trial judge states that it occurred "on the outskirts [of the borough] where there are no cross streets or regular crossings. ....." As much of defendant's argument is based on a pedestrian's duty in crossing a road `between crossings,' — a view of the case which we consider too limited — it may be desirable, with that contention in mind, to describe the locus in quo as it appears in the record, and, in doing so, as well as in reviewing the record generally, we, of course, consider only the evidence (it was all oral) supporting plaintiff's verdict and discard the rest.
Defendant was entering the borough, driving downgrade in a northern direction on a state highway having a concrete surface twenty feet wide, with a berm on each side about one and a half feet wide. Plaintiff's house was on the right or east side of the highway; on the opposite side of the highway were two houses; there were no other houses in the immediate vicinity of the accident. From plaintiff's house at or near the foot of the hill, the grade of the highway ascends southward three hundred and sixty feet to the top of the hill down which defendant drove. There are no houses between the top of that hill and plaintiff's house, and no so-called street crossings or crossing places for pedestrians. The evidence does not inform us definitely about other houses near plaintiff's on either side of the highway north of plaintiff's house, but it is clear there are none within at least a hundred *584 feet. About three hundred feet north of plaintiff's house, a railway track crosses the highway, and as we understand it, (no street plan was furnished), the highway curves to the left at or about the railway crossing and continues into the built up portion of the borough. At that railway crossing, and beyond it to the left in the town, there may be street crossings for pedestrians, but there are none from the railroad southward to and beyond the top of the hill from which defendant came, six hundred and sixty feet away. A witness was asked whether there were crossings "where pedestrians pass back and forth — crossing over," and said "in along there," "people just cross the macadam [concrete] road," "wherever they can get across."
We understand, then, that within the stretch of six hundred and sixty feet of highway there are no crossing places specially provided for pedestrians; that the section is built up in the very limited way described, so that, by force of circumstances, as the witness described it, "people just cross" "wherever they can get across." All this was obvious to the defendant as he descended, and a condition which the law required him to take into account. The plaintiff had been in one of the houses opposite her own, and in returning to her house, had reached the edge of the concrete surface of the highway for the purpose of crossing; there she looked southward to the top of the hill three hundred and sixty feet on her right and saw that nothing was approaching. She then started to walk across and, as a witness, who saw her, stated, "she was over halfway across the road" when she was struck by defendant's car and very seriously injured. The car then went some seventy-five feet, left the road "onto a bank," struck and broke a two inch gas pipe, and turned over. Defendant's driving was clearly negligent, as the verdict establishes on adequate evidence: Johnson v. *585
Abbott's Dairies,
The learned trial judge held that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and entered judgment for the defendant.
The general rule is that travelers on a highway have equal rights unless modified by statute or municipal ordinance, and either may enjoy them at will, but only in the exercise of that measure of care required to avoid encroachment on the rights of the other lawfully used; their duties are reciprocal; whether one has encroached depends on the measure of care required in the circumstances: Weiss v. Pittsburgh Rwy. Co.,
It has been said that where there is no sidewalk for pedestrians along a highway, their rights on the paved roadway are equal to those of vehicles (King v. Brillhart,
In the light of the rules, so illustrated, we come to this case. The plaintiff, seeing nothing approaching within three hundred and sixty feet — the top of the hill being the limit of her vision — started to walk across the twenty feet of concrete surface of the highway, and was run down when "over halfway across the road." She was not required to stop before starting to cross: Dugan v. Lyon,
Now, the appellee contends that plaintiff's contributory negligence should be declared as matter of law because there is no affirmative testimony that, after she had committed herself to the crossing (Twinn v. Noble
It was therefore the duty of the jury to determine whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence: Chesney v. Read,
The judgment is reversed and the record is returned with instructions to enter judgment on the verdict. *589