16 A.2d 382 | Pa. | 1940
This is an action in trespass for personal injuries. Plaintiff averred that on March 21, 1938, while crossing Butler Street in Pittsburgh at or near the intersection with 53rd Street, from south to the north side thereof, the defendant's automobile was proceeding not under proper control along Butler Street in a westerly direction from Fifty-fourth Street and struck and injured him. At the trial plaintiff testified that the car just before it hit him was "coming very fast." The only specific testimony as to the car's speed was that of one of plaintiff's witnesses who said the automobile "was coming 30 to 35 miles an hour." Plaintiff's motion for a new trial was refused. The reason assigned for a new trial was that part of the court's charge to the jury, as follows: "This case must stand or fall on whether or not this accident occurred at or near the intersection of Butler Street and Fifty-third Street, because if it occurred in the middle of the block, then the plaintiff is out of court, because he has definitely said, through his pleadings and his testimony, that he was crossing from the southwest corner of the intersection of Fifty-third Street and Butler Street to the northwest corner, and the jury, therefore, is not permitted to find that the accident occurred in the middle of the block and yet that the defendant could have been guilty of negligence in that he did not exercise the particular degree of care he should have exercised with regard to a pedestrian crossing in the middle of the block. . . . If you find that the accident occurred any place other *118 than the northwest corner of the intersection of those two streets, then your verdict must be in favor of the defendant."
In its opinion refusing a new trial the court below said: "The plaintiff's right to recovery, based on the alleged negligent conduct of the defendant in the operation of his automobile, could be based only on the legal doctrine that, at the intersection of streets, a pedestrian has the superior right-of-way." The court noted also that at the end of the charge the trial judge asked counsel if they had "any suggestions as to additions, corrections or amplifications." There were none.
It is the contention of appellant that whether plaintiff sustained his injuries at the street intersection or in the middle of the block, he had a right to recover if there was evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant and plaintiff presented a case free of contributory negligence. As a legal proposition that is correct. But if the jury found that plaintiff was injured in the middle of the block, was a prima facie case against the defendant made out on this record? To hold a driver liable for the injury of a pedestrian between crossings, the pedestrian must have been on the highway long enough to be seen by a careful driver in time to avoid hitting him. See Purdy et al., v. Hazeltine,
In Fearn v. City of Philadelphia,
On the record this case presents, if plaintiff crossed the street at a point away from the intersection, he not only failed to make out a prima facie case of negligence against the defendant but he also showed that he himself was guilty of negligence. The situs of an accident may sometimes be an important circumstance by which that "want of care" which is the characteristic element of negligence is to be determined. The assignment of error based upon the cited excerpt from the trial judge's charge is overruled.
The judgment is affirmed. *121