127 A. 444 | Pa. | 1924
Argued November 26, 1924. This action by husband and wife is for personal injuries to the latter, to whom we will refer as plaintiff. Ridge Street, extending through the Borough of West Easton in a northerly and southerly direction, is crossed at grade, and practically at right angles, by a track of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, defendant. At about seven o'clock on the morning of July 10, 1921, the plaintiff, who resided south of the track, came to the crossing on her way to church, and observing an engine and tender (herein called "the train") approaching the crossing from the west, stopped at a point on the east sidewalk near a signal post, about ten feet south of the track. As the train approached the crossing, a southbound taxicab (herein called "the cab") in Ridge Street came upon the track and was struck by the train and thrown against the signal post, which fell and injured plaintiff. The jury sustained the contention that the accident resulted from the negligent operation of the train, and, from judgments entered on verdicts for plaintiffs, defendant has appealed.
The only error assigned is the refusal to enter judgments for defendant non obstante veredicto. Assuming as we must in support of the verdict every fact and inference properly deducible from the evidence (Smith v. Standard Steel Car Co.,
The engine, with the tender attached, was running backwards and, according to the evidence of the crew, at the rate of from twelve to fifteen miles an hour. The cab driver, however, estimated the speed at forty miles an hour. It cannot be said as matter of law he was incompetent to express an opinion, for he had been driving automobiles and watching speedometers for six years, and saw the train approaching for one hundred and fifty feet and also as it passed after the collision. His estimate *43 finds some support in the conductor's statement on cross-examination that he did not know how fast the train was going, had no way of judging the speed and that it could have been going from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour; also that passing over the crossing at thirty miles an hour would be an excessive rate of speed; which is undoubtedly true, as Ridge Street was an important thoroughfare in a built-up section of the borough, not protected by gate or watchman. The question of signals and speed were properly submitted to the jury.
It is very earnestly urged for appellant that the accident resulted from the sole negligence of the cab driver in going upon the track in the path of the approaching train, apparently in an effort to beat it across. The driver, however, testified that he stopped to look and listen about thirty feet from the track, where his view to the west was obstructed by a bank, and that when he got where he could see in that direction the head of his cab was within five feet of the first rail; then, fearing he could not stop in time as the street was wet and he was going down grade, he speeded up in an unsuccessful effort to get across ahead of the train. The claim that he stopped also finds support in other testimony. The evidence' for defendant put the driver's conduct in a less favorable light, but the question of his negligence is not controlling in the instant case. The jury found defendant guilty of negligence and there is evidence to support that finding; hence the fact that the cab driver was also negligent is no defense. At most his negligence helped to bring about the result, and one injured by the concurrent negligence of two has a right of action against either: O'Malley v. Phila. R. T. Co.,
There was no break in the chain of events from the time the train hit the cab until the post hit the plaintiff; so it cannot be found as a legal conclusion that striking the cab was not the proximate cause of her injury. See McCaughey v. Am. Ice Co. (No. 1),
True, a wrongdoer is liable only for the natural and probable consequences of his act, such as might and should have been foreseen as likely to result therefrom (Hoag v. R. R.,
Appellant relies upon Wood v. Penna. R. R., supra, where a woman standing on the railroad track at a public crossing was struck by an express train, carried some distance and then thrown so as to injure a man who was standing on the station platform, over fifty feet from the crossing. It was there held, affirming the trial court, that the man's injury was not the natural and probable consequence of the alleged negligence in operating the train, but at most a remote possibility. It was also there held that the sole cause of the accident was the woman's negligence in standing on the track in front of the approaching train, which was plainly visible for over four hundred and fifty feet. That case is therefore not analogous to the present; but Carroll v. Conestoga Traction Company, 4 District and County Reports 425, is, although not a binding authority.
The assignment of error is overruled and the judgments are affirmed.