20 Pa. Super. 337 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
On Sunday September, 16, 1900, the plaintiff on his return from a creamery was crossing a bridge which forms part of the public highway in the defendant township. His horse stepped through a hole in the bridge, and he was thrown front his wagon and off the bridge, sustaining injuries. The hole had been in the bridge for about three weeks before the accident, and the plaintiff had observed it; but on the day preceding his injury, it is alleged, a board ten inches wide and about five feet long had been nailed over the hole, a repair that he had noticed when first crossing the bridge on September 16 on his way to the creamery. It is alleged that the board was knocked off in some way and the hole uncovered before his return, which was an hour or two later. The number of milk cans in his wagon prevented the use of a seat and he was riding on one of the cans.
In the defendant’s seventh point the court was requested to charge as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff had driven over the Wheeler bridge twice a day for three weeks next prior to and including the day of the alleged injury, and knew or ought to have known of the hole therein and its dangerous character, and that there was at the time of the alleged injury a sufficient and safe space in the roadway of said bridge beyond said hole, over which the plaintiff had formerly safely driven, and at the time of the accident could by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence have safely driven and avoided said hole and the injury complained of, then the plaintiff cannot recover.” The refusal to unqualifiedly affirm this point is the subject of the first assignment of error. The second and third assignments raise the same question; therefore, the three assignments will be considered together. We see no good reason why the point should not have been emphatically and unequivocally affirmed. The suggestion of the-plaintiff’s counsel that the point assumed that at the time
We cannot say that there would have been error in refusing the defendant’s ninth and tenth points, which are the subjects of the fourth and fifth assignments. To have affirmed the points without qualification would have required the court to say substantially, that it was negligence per se for the plaintiff to ride seated on the top of one of his milk cans. The court could not have declared that that was negligence under the circumstances without usurping the functions of the jury. But the fact that the plaintiff was compelled to ride in a position where in case of accident he would be easily thrown to the ground and injured was an additional reason for greater vigilance in looking where he was driving. Hence, it was error in answering the points to submit to the jury the question whether his riding backwards at the time he received the injury complained of was a negligent act. The jury should have been instructed that if he was riding in that way he was negligent and could not recover. This is all that need be said concerning these assignments.
We are not convinced that the court erred in refusing to charge that under all the evidence the verdict of the jury mus.t be for the defendant; therefore the sixth assignment of error is overruled.
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.