43 A.2d 370 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued April 10, 1945. This trespass action was brought by husband and wife to recover for personal injuries to the wife; for hospital and doctor bills; and for property damage to the husband's automobile. The court below refused defendant's point for binding instructions. Separate verdicts were rendered for the plaintiffs. Defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was refused; the court directed judgments on the verdicts; and defendant appeals.
As established by the verdict, defendant in the nighttime stopped his automobile upon a highway, Route 322. The weather was foggy, the roadway slippery and the defendant's lights were not burning.
Ellen Porfilio was driving her husband's automobile. She observed dim lights of an automobile travelling toward her and slowed down to about fifteen miles per hour. She then became "blinded" by bright lights of the oncoming car. She recovered her full vision when that automobile passed her, but was then confronted by the defendant's automobile, without lights, when she was only eight or ten feet distant therefrom. She tried to stop, but the collision ensued.
The sole question raised is whether the wife-plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We will dispose of this question, although it should be pointed out that verdicts were rendered in favor of the husband-plaintiff for certain items. The husband was not an occupant of the automobile, nor was she his servant, agent or employe, and the court could not have directed verdicts for the defendant merely because of the alleged contributory negligence of the wife-plaintiff.
The learned court below correctly held that the alleged contributory negligence of the wife-plaintiff was for the jury, and submitted that question in a careful charge which leaves no room for any criticism and, indeed, this is conceded by appellant. *515
As pointed out by the court below, this case is ruled by the decisions of our appellate courts.
This court held in Boor v. Schreiber et al.,
See also Buohl v. Lockport Brewing Company,
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.