128 A. 80 | Pa. | 1925
Argued January 19, 1925.
The injuries for which compensation is claimed in this case were the result of an automobile collision on the Lincoln highway, a short distance west of Gettysburg. Plaintiff with members of his family was driving west in a Chevrolet car and defendant with his son and another person going east in a Studebaker car. The son was driving and defendant sitting in the rear seat, — each claimed the other was negligent. Three suits arising out of the accident were tried together; a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff in this case, and verdicts for defendants in the cases of Spencer and his son against Wolf, the present plaintiff. The testimony of the *427
several witnesses as to the manner of the happening of the accident is quite contradictory and difficult to reconcile. If the circumstances were as related by defendants' witnesses, verdicts should have been rendered in their favor. On the contrary, if plaintiff's contention was sustained by the evidence, the verdict should not be disturbed. Which was the more convincing was entirely for the jury. In McMahon v. Reading Transit Light Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.