126 A. 204 | Pa. | 1924
Argued May 13, 1924.
The facts of this case and general legal principles involved sufficiently appear in the former appeal (Razzis v. Phila.
Reading Ry. Co.,
It will be recalled that when the horses driven by the deceased had stepped upon the track in front of the approaching train, they halted and he apparently tried *98 to back off the track. In view of this, defendant asked an eyewitness whether the driver could have cleared the track by going forward. This was properly excluded as calling for the opinion of the witness, and, in any event, was not important as the driver, placed in sudden peril, was not responsible for an error of judgment.
Plaintiffs' witness, Scully, was standing near the track and in a favorable position to hear warnings if given by those in charge of the approaching train, and his very positive evidence that the bell was not rung nor whistle blown, until the moment of accident, was sufficient to take that question to the jury notwithstanding evidence for the defense that proper warning was given: Cubitt v. New York Central R. R. Co.,
The testimony of one or two witnesses, called for the defense, tended to show the deceased did not keep a proper look-out as he drove upon the crossing, but they only glanced at him and it cannot be declared as a matter of law that their evidence was sufficient to overcome the presumption of due care on his part. The proof on the second trial disclosed no controlling difference from that of the first, hence the trial judge properly submitted the case to the jury (Kirk v. Showell, Fryer Co.,
The judgment is affirmed. *99