199 Pa. 156 | Pa. | 1901
Opinion by
That the carelessness of the appellee not only contributed to, but was the controlling cause of, the collision resulting in injuries so serious to him, is a conclusion not to be avoided. On a clear winter morning, about nine o’clock, he started from a lumber yard with a load of boards. These boards were about twenty feet long, piled crosswise on an ordinary two-wheeled cart, and extended diagonally across each other, about on a line with the shafts, as far as the horse’s head. The appellee, sitting on these boards on the right side of the cart, drove out of the lumber yard and turned southward on the Baltimore pike. The track of the railway company was on the turnpike, on the side opposite the lumber yard, and was on the right of the appellee as he was driving along the road. The space between the trolley track and the gutter on the opposite side is twenty-four and a half feet. After the appellee had left the yard and was some distance on the pike, a car of the appellant, coming towards him from the south, struck the boards projecting from the cart, and he was thrown violently to the ground, sustaining most serious injuries. His testimony and that of his witnesses clearly establishes the fact that he was not struck by the car as he was turning on the pike in leaving the lumber yard, but after he was fairly on his way some distance from the yard. He himself says that he had started up about the middle of the turnpike, and, according to the testimony of James H. Cooper, called by him to give actual measurements made, he was on the pike 175 feet from the center of the entrance to the lumber yard when the collision occurred. Before the boards were struck by the car, according to another witness called by him, he was driving along with a clear space of two or three feet between the hub of his cart wheel and the track. So driving along, he would have had a clear and unobstructed view of the approaching ear, if'he had been looking ahead of him, as it most certainly was his duty, in driving this cart with its load
The duty of the appellee, driving along the pike on the cart, loaded with lumber placed crosswise on it and projecting in front of it up to the head of the horse, and with the trolley track to the right of him, over which a car might come at any moment, was to look forward, and not backward, and to keep in the road, wide enough to do so, at a safe distance from the track. This he did not do, and that Mclntire, who was driving up behind him, passed him to the left, will not excuse his disregard of his duty. He was ahead of Mclntire, and had a right to remain in front of him in the middle of the pike, or at a safe distance from the trolley track, and his duty to look ahead continued. Mclntire passed, or tried to pass, at his own peril, and, if Morrow turned his attention to the former, instead of directing it to his own progress on the road to avoid the dangers ahead of him, he became careless, and his carelessness was negligence, which, in itself, is in the way of his right to recover.
The material facts in this case are not in dispute, and, in the face of them, there is no relief for the unfortunate appellee. He drove out of the lumber yard to the pike, and there turned homeward, on a road amply wide enough to allow him to pass on without danger of colliding with a trolley car coming on the track along the extreme right of the road. Instead of driv
No negligence was proven on the part of the defendant. Demonstration of this is not needed, in view of what we have said as to the conduct of the appellee. The assignments of error are sustained, the judgment of the court below is reversed and is now entered for the defendant.