Argued October 26, 1926.
The plaintiff's action is for compensation for injury to his automobile, resulting, as alleged, from the negligence of the defendant in permitting an obstruction to remain in the public highway. The car was in charge of a young man named Loy, who while driving at a speed of from 15 to 20 miles an hour on a night in October, met a car going in the opposite direction. *Page 141
The light of the latter car blinded the driver of the plaintiff's car and in his movement to pass the oncoming car, he drove in to the ditch at his right where the car came in contact with the branches of a tree which had been cut down in an adjoining field sometime before. It is not alleged that there was not a sufficient roadway for the passage of automobiles at the place where the accident took place, or that if the car had been driven along the right side of the road it could not have passed without coming in contact with the tree top. A case is presented therefore where a view of the road being prevented by the blinding light of the other car, the plaintiff's driver took the chance of going on at a fairly rapid speed without seeing where he was going. Of such driving it was well said by Justice SCHAFFER in Wilhelm v. Sunbury S. Ry. Co.,
The appeal is therefore dismissed and the judgment affirmed.