27 A.2d 658 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued April 28, 1942. This action is based on negligence. The plaintiff is a dentist. The relief sought is damages for the destruction *632 of his office equipment by fire. After a verdict in the sum of $2000 he filed a motion for new trial on the ground the verdict was inadequate. Defendant filed a motion for judgment n.o.v. The court granted the motion for judgment n.o.v. and refused the motion for new trial; the plaintiff appealed.
Appellant occupied the second floor of a V-shaped, triangular building fronting on three streets of the City of Pittsburgh, Fifth Avenue, Liberty Street, and Market Street. Trolley cars of appellees which pass the Fifth Avenue side of the building going north make a sharp turn into Liberty Street, the turn being greater than a right angle. The cars are powered by an overhead line which, of course, turns the corner with the tracks. It appears from photographs that at the apex of the curve there are three guy wires closely spaced on the trolley wire, which converge to a single attachment on a pole across the street from appellant's office. On the corner adjacent to the office building is another post to which are attached a veritable network of overhead wires. In addition to several guy wires, there is the necessary wiring for an attached traffic light and a large electric sign. A flexible cable leads from the electric sign to the building where it connects, through a panel board, with appellant's electrical equipment.
For perhaps a year prior to the accident it was a daily occurrence that, as appellees' cars negotiated the curve, the trolley pole would fly off and strike one or more of the guy wires. According to a qualified engineer, this striking of the pole against the guy wires would "tend to weaken either the insulator or the wires and their connections."
About six o'clock in the morning of December 17, 1938, as a car was passing, a policeman observed an unusual flash which "seemed to be coming from the trolley, the antenna to the trolley wire. . . . . ." The car stopped, the motorman got off, replaced the trolley pole which had slipped off the wire, and the car then *633 moved on. The policeman then "looked up there and saw a [guy] wire dangling." This was immediately followed by the appearance of a flame along the wire leading from the electric sign to the building. And about a minute later, there was a flash or explosion on the second floor of the building.
In its opinion, the lower court said: "The weakness of plaintiff's position, as we view it, is that assuming that the breaking of the insulator, thereby causing the span wire to hang down, was the proximate cause of the injury complained of — and, in our opinion, there cannot be any serious question as to that — and that it was in a weakened condition as a result of the trolley poles striking against the wires or their attachments, there is no evidence that the weakness was patent and therefore discernible upon reasonable examination and inspection or what, if any, practicable measures should have been taken to guard against the breaking of the insulator or the wires."
We are unable to agree with the conclusion that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of negligence.
It is well settled in this Commonwealth, that the rule of res ipsa loquitur does not apply to a broken trolley wire or a fallen trolley pole. Lanning v. Pittsburg Railways Co.,
The order granting appellees' motion for judgment n.o.v. must be vacated.
There remains for consideration appellant's argument that the court also erred in refusing his motion for new trial. He offered evidence which, if believed, might have justified a verdict in his favor for approximately $4500. This represented the total value of property alleged to have been destroyed. But the evidence was oral and its weight for the jury. Since the verdict was substantial, we would not consider the refusal of a new trial an abuse of discretion. Woodward v. Consolidated Traction Co.,
It is so ordered.