47 A.2d 193 | Pa. | 1946
Argued April 11, 1946. This is an appeal from an order refusing to take off a compulsory non-suit in a trespass action for damages for injuries to the plaintiff's person and property (an automobile) alleged to have been sustained through the negligent operation of the defendant's automobile. The learned trial judge entered the non-suit, which the court en banc later refused to take off, on the ground that the evidence adduced by the plaintiff at trial "showed nothing but the mere happening of an accident".
The facts in the case, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff (Stephany v. Equitable Gas Company,
About 5 o'clock in the afternoon of February 4, 1942, the plaintiff was driving his automobile northeastwardly on the Roosevelt Boulevard in the vicinity of Fanshawe Street in Philadelphia. The Boulevard, which runs in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction, has four lanes for traffic, each of the outside lanes and the lane nearest to it being for travel in the same direction. The lanes are separated by grass plots. The plot separating the two lanes for northeasterly travel is eight feet wide *310 at the place of the accident here involved. It is also broken through at that point by a paved cut-off which admits of the passage of a vehicle from one of the northeast travel lanes to the other between street intersections. While the plaintiff was so proceeding in the outer lane at a speed of twenty-five miles an hour about four feet from the separating grass plot on his left, he approached the cut-off above-mentioned. He looked into the cut-off, saw "nothing there but the cut-off" and "drove straight ahead". When he was about two-thirds of the way along the width of the cut-off, he "heard a loud crash at the back of [his] car", was "knocked unconscious" and knew nothing more until he came to while his injuries were being dressed in a hospital.
A motorcycle guard on the Boulevard, who reached the scene shortly after the accident had happened, testified that he found the plaintiff's car on the grass plot against the fourth tree planted on the plot north of the cut-off and that the defendant's automobile was cater-cornered across the cut-off with its left front wheel in the outer lane just beyond the cut-off and its two rear wheels in the cut-off. The defendant told the guard that she had been going northeastwardly on the Boulevard in the inner lane; that at the cut-off she had made a right-hand turn to get into the outer lane so that she could make a right-hand turn off the Boulevard at the Fanshawe Street intersection beyond to get to her home; that she had looked "up and down" and "didn't see anything"; and that "the first thing she knew, her front fender struck Neff's car, and that was all there was to it". The guard also testified that there were "a couple of creases" in the right front fender of the defendant's car "about even with the headlight". A photograph of the car, which was received in evidence as an exhibit, shows that the damage to the defendant's car was at the front side of the right front fender. Another photographic exhibit shows that there was nothing to obstruct the view of a driver in either lane approaching the cut-off. *311 The trees that are planted in a longitudinal line in the middle of the separating grass plot were bare of foliage.
The facts of the instant case, as we have related them and as the jury might have found them, made the matter of the defendant's negligence a question for the jury. Of course, the mere happening of the vehicular collision fixed no liability for its causation. Negligence is the gist of an action for such an accident and the burden of proving facts legally sufficient to support a finding of negligence is upon the one asserting consequent liability. As we recently said in Martin v.Marateck,
In the instant case the physical facts appearing of record plus the plaintiff's testimony and the defendant's admissions, as related by the guard, were sufficient to warrant a finding by the jury that the defendant, upon turning from her line of parallel travel in the inner lane into the cut-off, failed to see what must have been plainly observable in the outer lane and, as a consequence, negligently *312
drove her car into the rear of the plaintiff's car then passing the cut-off in a direct and unchanged line of travel in the outer lane: see Pelosi v. Hoffman,
The court below entered the non-suit on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the accident was the result of the defendant's negligence and not *313 that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. In any event, there is nothing in the record before us from which a court could say that the plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law.
The order of the court below is reversed with a v. f. d. n.