Petrosky v. Danovitz

86 Pa. Super. 22 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925

Argued May 5, 1925. These appeals are from judgments on verdicts for husband and wife for damages resulting from a collision by defendant's motor truck and plaintiff's wagon. The wagon was standing by the curb on Main Street in Sharpsburg and as Jane Petrosky, one of plaintiffs, was alighting from the wagon, the motor truck crashed into the rear end of the wagon and injured her. As the only point presented here is the refusal to enter judgment for the defendant n.o.v., we must take the evidence most favorably supporting the verdicts. The distance between the curb and the nearest car track was about five and a half feet. Defendant's truck approached in the car track at a speed of 20 miles an hour. When about seven feet from the rear end of the wagon, the truck turned toward the right, struck the wagon (described as a "small spring wagon") and "smashed it into the sidewalk," and the track "went clean on the sidewalk and there it was stopped." One witness in referring to the right front wheel of the truck, said "I don't think it came off. I think it was bent after it hit the sidewalk."

We have, then, a case where a wagon lawfully occupying the highway, is struck in the rear by a truck driven by defendant's employee. The day was clear, and the driver's view of the standing wagon was unobstructed. As the plaintiffs were lawfully using the highway when struck in the circumstances described, a prima facie case of negligence was made out if the jury should believe the evidence offered on behalf of plaintiffs: Reisinger v. McConnell, 265 Pa. 565; Rankin v. Baking Co., 272 Pa. 108; McFeeters v. Lee, 274 Pa. 83. *25

Defendant contends, however, that it produced evidence showing that the accident was unavoidable, in that a bolt, called a spindle bolt, used to keep the wheel on the axle, broke and caused the car to move from its direct course and strike the wagon. In our view of the record, that is an assumption without legal support. The evidence is not clear that the bolt broke before the collision with the wagon; on the contrary, the evidence is in dispute, as will appear. The driver of the truck testified, ". . . . . . as I got past this woman [one of the plaintiffs] all at once it swerved over this way, I couldn't hold it, and the wheel went loose from the truck, just the tie-rod holding, I throwed off the gas and stopped as quick as I possibly could, and on this sidewalk I had to stop, you know; I couldn't do anything else." Another witness testified that the wheel came off the truck. The driver said that while standing there a policeman came along and said "you dropped that bolt on the railroad crossing" (about two squares from the collision), showing him "a half inch of the bolt." That piece of bolt was thrown away. The witness testified the spindle bolt, of which the broken piece was supposed to be a part, was 6 or 7 inches long. A witness who took the truck away after the accident, said he inserted an old bolt in place of the broken spindle bolt. Defendant called an automobile mechanic, who testified that he inserted a new bolt in place of the temporary bolt put in by the witness just referred to. He testified the spindle bolt was about 3 or 4 inches long and that the spindle bolt "only can break in one place before it can come out," and "that it would be right in the middle of its length," that is, "in the dowel pin hole." He testified that the truck driver showed him "a bolt" which "was broken in the dowel pin hole," but adds, "I didn't pay much attention to it, looked at it and threw it away." Wherever that piece of bolt came from, and there is no evidence that it came from the truck, it certainly was not the piece of bolt half an inch long, found by the *26 policeman, for if the spindle bolt could only break in the middle of the dowel pin hole, as the evidence states, the part found by the policeman was never in the truck.

This evidence, subject as it is to various inferences, presented in defense to the prima facie violation of the right of the plaintiffs to occupy the highway, was necessarily for the jury. It may well be, as plaintiffs contend, that the break in the spindle bolt resulted from the impact of the motor truck and the curb, that is, — after the collision with the wagon. The evidence is therefore not undisputed that the motor truck was in proper control of the driver and left its course in the car tracks and crashed into the wagon because of an unforeseen break of part of the truck, which deprived the driver of control. That difference in the testimony distinguishes this case from, and also excludes it from the control of the decisions relied on by the learned counsel for appellant, such as cases holding there was no liability where a plaintiff sued to recover for loss resulting from the mere parting of a trolley wire (Lanning v. Rys. Co., 229 Pa. 575); or the falling of a trolley pole (Zercher v. Transit Co., 50 Pa. Super. 324); or where front and rear trucks of a street car divide at a switch, in the absence of evidence that the switch is out of repair (Livingstone v. Rys. Co., 64 Pa. Super. 593), the rule being well settled otherwise if there is evidence that the switch is out of repair (Geiser v. Rys. Co., 223 Pa. 170), as well as the other decisions cited, holding that there can be no recovery without some evidence to show that the resulting harm could have been foreseen as probably following the oversight alleged.

The judgments are affirmed. *27

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