51 Pa. Super. 637 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
The three assignments of error apply .to the appellant’s single proposition that the plaintiff’s evidence did not make out a case of negligence. The undisputed testimony is that Mrs. McCollum was injured in alighting from the car or immediately thereafter, and the jury has found that the. injury was attributable to the negligence of the conductor in stopping the car- at an unsafe, place beyond the crossing at which the plaintiff supposed she was alighting. The substance of the evidence in. support of the action is that the plaintiff in returning from the exposition to her home was riding on an open car of the defendant along Chartiers. avenue; the time was about eleven o’clock in the evening and the night was dark and stormy and a heavy rain was falling; the plaintiff desiring to alight at American avenue which crosses Chartiers avenue at right angles gave timely notice to the conductor and the latter announced American avenue and the car was stopped at what she believed was the American avenue stopping place but which was in fact beyond American avenue and nearly in the middle of the next block; in alighting from the car she stepped onto a pile of building stone lying along the street curb; she did not see the stone on account of the darkness and because of the fact that she had just left the lighted car;
We are of the opinion, thereafter, that the judgment must be affirmed.