66 Pa. Super. 101 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1917
Opinion by
The automobile of the plaintiff, operated by himself, and a car of the defendant company, moving in opposite directions, approached each other upon the same track, and a collision was the natural result. The front part of the automobile was considerably battered and broken as a consequence of the collision and for that the plaintiff seeks to recover damages in this action. He recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below, and from that judgment the defendant appeals. The defendant, at the trial, submitted a point praying for binding instructions, which the court refused, and subsequently obtained a rule for judgment non obstante veredicto, which rule the court below discharged. The specifications of error are all founded upon these rulings. The question for consideration is, therefore, whether the plaintiff upon his own showing was entitled to have his case submitted to the jury.
The collision occurred on north Ninth street in the City of Reading. That street is forty feet wide between curb lines; there is in the middle of the street a single track street railway of the defendant company, upon which cars run from north to south. The plaintiff was driving his automobile towards the north, in the direction opposite to that in which street cars move; he was upon the east or right side of the street, between the car track and the curb lines. There were two other automobiles in front of him, going in the same direction, the rear one of which was about a car length ahead of the car of plaintiff. They were approaching Greenwich street, which crossed the street upon which they were moving, the two automobiles which preceded plaintiff being between him and that cross street, and when plaintiff’s car was about seventy feet from the cross street, the two
“Q. — Couldn’t you have stopped?
“A. — I believe I could have.
“Q. — But you chose to turn out and to cross the track?
“A. — I wanted to go around him.
“Q — You wanted to pass and had to turn on the track to do that?
“A. — Sure.
“Q. — And you turned your auto and did go toward the other side of the track?
“A. — No, sir; I didn’t go toward the other side of the track.
“Q. — Well, you intended to go to the other side of the track?
“A. — No, sir. I intended to go around these machines.
“Q. — But to go up on the other side of Ninth street?
“A. — No, sir; I didn’t intend to go up that way. I turned out to run around them on the track. I wanted to go around them — just merely go around those machines. When I got out on the track I saw the trolley car and I knew I couldn’t get around then any more.
“Q. — The car was then about even with the first auto, was it; I mean the trolley car was then about where the first auto was?
“A. — He would have been there until I got there, to my judgment.
“Q. — When you first saw the car it was about twenty-five feet from you?
“A. — About that.”
It is, however, argued that the plaintiff was called upon to act in a sudden emergency, and that fearing he Avould run into the automobile in front of him, in case he did not turn towards the street car track, he is not to be held guilty of negligence in going upon the track. This argument is not supported by the testimony of the
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted to the court below with direction to enter judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto.