86 Pa. Super. 249 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued April 23, 1925. Contributory negligence prevents recovery. Plaintiff's car travelled an ascending grade about 50 feet behind a "large covered truck," 6 feet 6 inches wide, and about 10 feet high, that obstructed the driver's view of any obstacles ahead of the truck as well as of approaching traffic. The paved road was 16 feet wide, with perhaps 4 feet of dirt road on the left of the paving. On the right half of the paved road, and therefore an obstacle to the truck's progress, were two coils of telephone wire, about to be strung. The truck moved up the grade at 15 miles an hour and slowed down as it approached the wire until it came to a stop, travel around the wire on the left being impossible because of defendant's approaching car. At about the same time, having determined to pass the truck, the driver of plaintiff's car, without signifying that intention to the truck driver (who was called by plaintiff and testified he did not know plaintiff's car was behind him), started into the left half of the road, to pass the truck, when immediately he observed defendant's car about 100 feet ahead of the truck, approaching at high speed. Plaintiff's driver turned his car to get back to the right half of the road behind the truck, but perhaps mistaking the diminishing speed of the truck, ran into its rear left wheel; as he himself described it, his "bumper caught the rear wheel of the truck ahead and caused me to recoil somewhat; that recoil possibly threw the left rear end of my car *252 slightly over the middle of the road. There I stopped and within what seemed to be but the fraction of a second after that I was struck by [defendant's] car in the left rear end."
We accept the evidence on behalf of plaintiff that at the point where its driver attempted to pass, he was more than 200 feet from the crest of the hill, but it is obvious that he attempted to pass the truck "recklessly or at a rate of speed greater than is reasonably proper, having regard to the width, traffic, and use of the highway. . . . . ." (section 19 of the Motor Vehicle Act of 1919, P.L. 689). The driver drove from where he could not see whether the left half of the road ahead of him was in use, only to find that it was, and, not only that, but he did so without such control of his car as would enable him to get back to his side of the road, on observing an approaching car already committed to the portion of the road he proposed to traverse. It has been repeatedly held that a man may not drive where he cannot see, without bearing the resulting consequences: Gosling v. Gross,
Judgment is reversed and here entered for defendant. *253