177 Pa. Super. 344 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1955
Opinion by
In the early morning of November 16, 1948 a truck owned by Gertrude Sluganski was driven by John Sluganski north on Cedar Avenue, a four-lane highway in the City of Pittsburgh. At that time defendant’s tractor-trailer was traveling west on East Ohio Street, also a four-lane road. The two streets intersect at right angles. The traffic on Cedar Avenue was governed by a blinking red light and on East Ohio Street by a blinking amber signal at the intersection. There are two sets of street car tracks in East Ohio
John Sluganski testified that at about 2 a.m. he was driving the truck north on Cedar Avenue and that as he came to the intersection he stopped “for the red blinker” and “looked both ways and didn’t see anything coming and proceeded across East Ohio Street”; and that when he “got over to the second car tracks on the other side going north . .. along came this trailer and smashed [his car] in the back end.” He stated also: “After the trailer hit me it didn’t stop for a block or more.” Elsewhere in his testimony he said that defendant’s tractor came to a stop “about halfway down the block.” The defendant’s toactor-trailer came into the intersection from this plaintiff’s right. The following is the testimony of plaintiff-driver on the controlling phase of these eases: “Q. When did you first see the trailer truck? A. After I got about half way across it came bearing down. Q. How far away was he when you first saw him? A. About 25 or 30 feet.” This plaintiff was traveling about 7 miles per hour and he estimated that the defendant’s speed was about “40 or 45 miles an hour.” He testified further that when he passed the building line he could see to his right 50 or 60 feet and that after he passed a car parked at the curb on East Ohio Street, which obstructed his view to the right, he could see “a block or so” in spite of the fact that it was a “sort of misty”
To refer to the plaintiff’s testimony in its most favorable light, as we have, demonstrates the error in the refusal of judgments for defendant n.o.v. The defendant’s tractor-trailer was proceeding from plaintiff’s right, with only a cautionary blinking amber light against him, and both vehicles approached the intersection at about the same time. Defendant therefore had the right of way. McMillan v. Mor Heat Oil & Equip. Co., Inc., 174 Pa. Superior Ct. 308, 101 A. 2d 413. But even if the question of defendant’s negligence were for the jury, plaintiffs clearly are barred from recovery by the contributory negligence of the driver of their truck. It is the duty of a driver crossing a two-way street to look to his right as he nears the middle of the street before entering into the traffic lane coming from that direction and to yield the right of way to a vehicle approaching from the right unless so far in advance of it that in the exercise of care and prudence he is reasonably justified in believing that he can cross ahead of it without danger of collision. Affelgren v. Kinka, 351 Pa. 99, 40 A. 2d 418. In the present case, also, the plaintiff-driver had no warrant whatever for such a belief. Here (as in
Contributory negligence conclusively appears in these cases; the verdicts therefore cannot stand. Sargeant v. Ayers, 358 Pa. 393, 57 A. 2d 881.
Judgments reversed and here entered for the defendant n.o.v.