78 Pa. Super. 332 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
Main Street in the Borough of G-irardville runs east and west and Richard Street intersects it at right angles. A single track street railway lies in the center of Main Street, at Richard Street there is a branch railway leading to Shenandoah, and the track entering Main Street at Richard Street, turns west on Main Street. The track on Richard Street had not been operated during the winter of 1920 and what is called a “station car,” used as a temporary waiting room, was standing on Richard Street about even with the building line on Main Street. The plaintiff entered Main Street and proceeded west toward Richard Street. With him were five companions. They proceeded to drive west on Main Street, going at the rate of six or seven miles an hour. There was a work car standing on the track on Main Street. This work car could be seen by the plaintiff for some hundreds of feet. When the auto on which the plaintiff was a passenger got to within six to twelve feet of the curve at Richard Street, the work car was suddenly backed off the Main Street track on to the curve and in front of the automobile, so that Rice, the driver, had four alternatives presented to him; he could continue in his course and pass between the work car and station car and run the risk of being pinched between them, or he could turn sharply to the right and perhaps pass the station car, or turn to the left, which is the course he adopted, with disastrous results, or he could stop. The last would probably have been the best plan but there is some evidence that the distance in which he could stop his car bore close relation to the distance he was from the work car. Rice turned to the left and struck the side
We think the matter was properly left to the jury.
The assignments are overruled and judgment is affirmed.