184 A. 671 | Pa. | 1936
Argued April 10, 1936. The judgment cannot be sustained. The plaintiff, a guest in an automobile, was injured when the car crashed through a defective railing on Heth's Run Bridge, a part of a city street in Pittsburgh carrying a public highway over a deep gully. It became necessary for the driver of the car to avoid colliding with another car that suddenly stalled in front of it on the bridge; she attempted to avoid it by passing around it, but, by some mishap, crossed the center line of the bridge and "the left half of the road, mounted a five inch curbstone on the bridge" and proceeded "across a 'fourteen foot' sidewalk and hit the railing of the bridge . . . crashed through the railing and fell into the gully below."*
The evidence is not printed but the instructions to the jury indicate that there was ample testimony to justify a finding that the guard rail had become defective, that the city had notice of the fact, and that the evidence would support a finding of liability on the part of the city if properly submitted to the jury. The learned trial judge asked the jury to answer special interrogatories; one was as follows: "The first question you have to determine is whether or not that accident was such accident as should have been reasonably anticipated by the City of Pittsburgh in the construction and maintenance *496 of that guard rail at that particular place." The jury was instructed that if the interrogatory was answered "No," further deliberation was unnecessary, and a verdict for defendant was required. The jury answered "No" and accordingly found for defendant.
The appellant plaintiff contends very properly that this was an inadequate submission of the ultimate issue. Municipalities must keep their bridges "in such condition as to be reasonably safe for public travel": Dalton v. Upper Tyrone Twp.,
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.