38 A.2d 508 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1944
Argued May 1, 1944. In this trespass action arising from an intersection collision of two automobiles judgment was entered for plaintiff on the verdict for damages to his car. Defendant questions the refusal of judgment for him n.o.v. contending that the evidence charges plaintiff with contributory negligence.
In the early evening of April 25, 1936, about dusk, plaintiff was driving his automobile north on Elizabeth-McKeesport Road, a through highway. He is a physician and was very familiar with the road but was not then on a professional call. Defendant was driving his car west on Lovedale Road. The headlights of both automobiles were on. Both parties knew of a "Thru Traffic Stop" sign on Lovedale Road on the approach to the intersection of the through highway. "Several hundred feet" before plaintiff reached the intersection he observed defendant's car approaching from his right. He testified: "As I was approaching the intersection I was watching, I had been watching his car. I knew it was there." He observed that defendant was traveling slowly and was further slackening his speed. His assumption that defendant would stop was well founded; defendant did stop his car 15 or 20 feet from the intersection but then immediately proceeded into the intersection intending to make a left turn. Defendant's right front fender came in contact with the rear of plaintiff's car causing it to overturn in the intersection. Plaintiff at the moment of impact was looking straight ahead but saw defendant's car as it struck his right rear bumper and fender.
Defendant was negligent in proceeding into the *451
through highway, after a mere formal compliance with the mandate of the stop sign, without observing plaintiff's approach. Plaintiff testified that before reaching the intersection he could see to his right for a distance of 300 feet down Lovedale Road. The inference was for the jury that defendant could have seen plaintiff's car had he looked. If defendant's view in fact was obstructed as he approached the highway after stopping, he was chargeable with negligence by his faiure to continue to look for oncoming traffic on the through highway and to control his automobile accordingly. Riley v. McNaugher,
Plaintiff on the other hand was not chargeable with contributory negligence merely because he failed to anticipate the negligence of defendant. Handfinger et al. v. Barnwell Bros.Inc.,
At the time of the accident the maximum speed limit of a motor vehicle on a highway was 40 miles per hour. Amendment of July 16, 1935, P.L. 1056, § 29. Whether plaintiff forfeited his right of way by exceeding the speed limit and was chargeable with contributory negligence on that ground was a question for the jury. Maio Exrx. v. Fahs et al.,
This is a case which invites emphasis on the principle that, with the verdict in plaintiff's favor, he is entitled to the most favorable `inferences from all of the testimony. The burden of proving plaintiff's contributory negligence was on the defendant; no burden of dis-proof rested on the plaintiff. For this reason it was the duty of the jury to reconcile plaintiff's contradictory or inconsistent statements in the light of the circumstances and determine which should prevail. Steingart v.Kaney,
Judgment affirmed.