126 A. 191 | Pa. | 1924
Argued May 13, 1924. Defendant appeals from a judgment on a verdict fixing plaintiff's damages for injuries resulting from a collision between a wagon loaded with hay, on top of which he was riding, and defendant's trolley car, while the two vehicles were traversing in opposite directions the bridge crossing the Susquehanna River between Sunbury and Shamokin Dam on the night of May 30, 1923. *71
Defendant maintains a single track on the bridge, occupying its extreme southern side. North of the track there is a space for vehicular traffic, not sufficiently wide to permit two vehicles to pass without impinging on the car track. At the time of the accident, it being a holiday, this space was crowded with automobiles, and plaintiff's team, on which he had a light, was proceeding on the car track. Owing to the stream of automobile traffic, he found it impossible to turn off the track, and, observing the approaching car, the headlight of which he could see for several hundred feet, stopped his horses. The motorman did not notice the team until he was practically upon the horses — only five or six feet from them, owing, as he testified, to the blinding effect of the headlights of automobiles. The testimony disclosed the car was moving at a rate not exceeding eight miles an hour, and, upon ascertaining the presence of the plaintiff's team, the motorman reversed his car, too late to avoid the contact. In the collision, the machinery controlling the hydraulic brake was broken, and the front of the car considerably damaged, as was the wagon, the force of the impact separating the horses from it. Plaintiff was thrown to the floor of the bridge and seriously injured. There was evidence, on defendant's behalf, that the car was stopped within five or six feet from the point of collision, and, in plaintiff's, that it ran a distance of one of the bridge spans.
While other negligence was alleged in plaintiff's statement and the attempt to support it by testimony was made, in the opinion of the court below but one element of failure of duty on defendant's part was established, and the only question submitted to the jury as to its lack of care was, "the failure to have given the plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to remove his team from the tracks." Appellant contends there was error in submitting this question, that there should have been a directed verdict in its behalf. It is also alleged that the court erred in charging that the motorman was an interested witness. *72
As to the last proposition, the record discloses that, after instructing the jury that plaintiff was an interested witness, the court continued: "I will say the motorman in this case is interested because he is the man who was the operator of the car at the time of the accident, and on account of whose alleged negligence the accident occurred __________ I have said to you that the motorman is an interested witness, I still adhere to these instructions, but the interest is not a pecuniary interest; it only goes to his credibility, because of his being the motorman in charge at the time of the accident." We think this comment was warranted under the circumstances of the case. It was proper to bring to the attention of the jury the fact that, although the motorman had no pecuniary interest, nevertheless he had that interest in his own lack of blameworthiness which might lead him to minimize his fault. This instruction was in line with that approved in Ellis v. Lake Shore, etc., R. R. Co.,
As to defendant's negligence, it contends none was shown, and relies upon Wagner v. Lehigh Traction Co.,
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.