170 A. 272 | Pa. | 1934
Argued January 4, 1934. This case involves a question of contributory negligence. At 8 a. m., November 12, 1931, Charles G. Michener was standing on the pavement at the southwest corner of State Road and Morgan Avenue, Drexel Hill, waiting to take an eastbound bus on State Road. This road is thirty feet wide and runs east and west. Morgan Avenue is twenty-four feet wide and runs north and south. The bus was about thirty-two feet long and eight feet wide, and it stopped at a point near the south curb of State Road with its front end about ten feet west from the line of the western curb of Morgan Avenue. At about the same time a man named Albert H. Large, who was driving south on Morgan Avenue, came to a stop near the northwest corner of State Road and Morgan Avenue, i. e., at a point on Morgan Avenue near the State Road intersection *158 and about forty feet north of where Michener was standing. After blowing his horn to attract the attention of Michener, he signalled the latter to join him. Michener responded to the summons, and according to Large, "came out in front of the bus, probably ten or fifteen feet in front of the bus, and more to the center of State Road and looked up and down and when he started to come over, he looked again." Large said Michener "took a diagonal curve in front of the bus so as to get a clear view . . . . . . and then he started over with a dog-trot . . . . . . and when he went five or six steps he was struck" by defendant's car, traveling eastward. Its speed at the time was, according to Large's estimate, forty-five to fifty miles an hour. Michener was thrown up in the air, and as he was coming down about twenty-five feet east of where he was first struck, the car hurled him around and knocked him down. It was testified that defendant's car gave no warning, and that as defendant's "heavy, dark car . . . . . . hit Michener, it swerved over to the side, and the brakes locked, and the wheels scraped on the road, then he [defendant] stopped just west of the second driveway on the north side of State Road, which is about 130 or 140 feet east of Morgan Avenue." This testimony indicates that the defendant's car ran more than 150 feet after striking the deceased.
The injuries inflicted upon Michener in this accident caused his death three days later. His widow brought suit against the defendant and secured a verdict for $7,500. There was a motion made for judgment n. o. v. This was overruled and judgment was entered. Defendant appealed.
The sole question before us is whether the plaintiff's decedent was guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar recovery. "When a person is killed in an accident there is a presumption arising from the general knowledge of the strength of the instinct of self-preservation and the natural desire to avoid pain and injury to oneself that the deceased at the time of the accident was exercising *159
due care": Morin v. Kreidt,
At points near street intersections where street cars and buses stop to take on and discharge passengers, as here, drivers of motor vehicles who have due and humane regard for the safety of others, always have their cars "under control," as we defined that phrase in the case above cited. Persons who have occasion to cross the street on foot at regular street crossings know this fact and naturally assume that drivers of motor vehicles will approach these crossings cautiously and will not accelerate the speed of the cars just before they reach the intersections. Pedestrians cannot be charged with negligence because they assume that the driver of a motor vehicle will exercise due care under the circumstances and then act upon that assumption. This court said in Weiss v. Pgh. Rys. Co.,
It is a legitimate inference from the evidence in this case that if the defendant had exercised due care this unfortunate accident would not have taken place. The decedent's act in crossing the street at the regular crossing *161 when and as he did was obviously predicated upon the belief that the driver of the oncoming motor vehicle would not do as he actually did, to wit, change the path of his car and accelerate its speed. That the defendant was negligent just before and as he struck the decedent, the jury was amply justified in finding from the evidence. The question of the deceased's contributory negligence was for the jury.
The judgment is affirmed.