Messinger v. Phila. R. T. Co.

97 Pa. Super. 319 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1929

Argued October 10, 1929. Appellant assigns for error the action of the court below in refusing its point for binding instructions and its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. The action is for damage to plaintiff's automobile, a Buick sedan, which he was driving when it was struck by one of defendant's trolley cars. The accident happened on Island Road, a street which runs north and south in the western section of Philadelphia. The street is about thirty-five feet wide between the two lines of defendant's tracks which occupy the east and west sides of the street. The south bound track is on the west side and the north bound track is on the east side. Plaintiff testified to this effect: At about half past seven on the morning of January 19, 1927, he was driving his automobile south on Island Road. The *321 streets were slippery ...... "had a thin coating of ice on it, ...... and there was a garbage wagon coming up right toward me on the track, on the south bound track, coming toward me, and when he was within at about twenty-five feet of me he pulled right out into the roadway. Naturally the only thing I had to do was jam my brakes on because I couldn't get around him because there was other traffic coming north on Island Avenue, and as I jammed the brakes suddenly I skidded into the car track. I made a complete turn. In other words I was going south and when I applied my brakes I skidded right around and I was facing practically in a northerly direction...... The traffic was a little congested at that time. There were lots of automobiles going south and going north...... There was a garbage wagon pulling out of the south bound track ...... and as he pulled out in front of me ...... there was a Ford truck and there was another Ford roadster coming up; they was trying to pass each other and naturally the only thing I had to do was either stop or smash into the garbage wagon, and, so, naturally, I applied my brakes and I steered a little toward the tracks and I skidded right around...... When I came to a rest on the trolley tracks...... I seen this trolley car approximately 750 or 1,000 feet away. It was practically two good city blocks away. I could not pull out of the track at that time because the traffic was so great on the north bound and south bound, and this garbage wagon in the meantime managed to get off and started up the road, but I could not pull out of the track because I had to make a clean turn, nor I could not pull up north again because there was a trolley car going south on Island Road, and so I just had to stop there...... I saw this trolley car coming down so I thought he would stop, but when he got within about twenty-five or thirty feet of me I seen he was trying frantically to stop the *322 car and at that time I realized I was going to get hit ......, and I just remained there and took the blow." On cross-examination he testified that when he tried to stop he was going about fifteen miles an hour; that his motor was running at the time of the collision and that at that time there were three lines of traffic on Island Road, two lines going north and one going south, but that the garbage wagon obstructed the south bound line. He admitted that there were "breaks" in the lines of north bound traffic, but it does not appear that there was any "break" in the south bound line of traffic which had been obstructed by the garbage wagon. That is the testimony tending to support the verdict. The defendant's evidence was totally irreconcilable with it and, therefore, need not be considered in deciding whether the court should have entered judgment for it n.o.v.

Counsel for the defendant do not contend in their brief that the plaintiff's evidence did not warrant a finding by the jury that the motorman was negligent. Their contention is that the jury should not have been permitted to pass on the question of plaintiff's contributory negligence, because his failure to remove his car from the track before it was struck convicts him of contributory negligence as a matter of law. To this we are unable to assent. Of course, if the condition of traffic on Island Road at the time was such that he could have, with safety, driven off of the trolley track, it was his duty to do so and failure to perform that duty would be negligence in law. The fact that he could not pull off the track by turning toward the south would not excuse him from driving in some other direction if that were feasible. But, under his own testimony, it is not so clear that it was feasible for him to drive off of the track at all; that the court could declare that he was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to do so. The inference is not clear *323 that the condition of south bound traffic on the west side of the street was such as to require him to drive into it or cross it. The jury could find that he was not warranted in undertaking to do it and that this absolved him from contributory negligence.

The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.

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