This case was tried with another suit brought by Margaret Bodnar, who later married Mr. Rissel, against herself as sub
Plaintiff’s first and second contention question the rulings of the trial judge with reference to the depositions of Walter Steiger, the motorman in charge of the trolley car at the time of the collision. Mr. Steiger’s depositions were taken twice. The first occasion was on November 5, 1953, when Mr. Body for the street railway company and Mr. Weidner for the. estate were present. The second set of depositions of this witness was taken on January 19, 1956, in the presence of Mr. Body. Mr. Weidner for Margaret Bodnar Rissel and Mr. Cottom for the estate. Mr. Steiger’s physical condition necessitated his absence from the trial, and his depositions, subject to whatever rules govern their use, became available. In plaintiff’s case, Mr. Weidner offered a part of the 1956 deposition as against the estate. Mr. Cottom objected; objection was overruled. No error appears. Then ensued a further objection to the manner in which plaintiff was about to read the deposition or, more accurately, a request was made for a direction that plaintiff read all of the deposition that was relevant. The court sustained this request, and outlined the course to be followed by counsel. No error appears.
The Reading Street Railway Company subsequently closed its direct case in defense, and Mr. Cottom, for defendant estate, rested without offering testimony. Mr. Weidner then offered, as plaintiff’s evidence in rebuttal, a part of the 1953 deposition. A side bar conference took place, at which Mr. Weidner offered the following:
“Q. And as far as you really recall, you don’t know whether the trolley was still on the track when the collision occurred, do you? You don’t recall that exactly, do you?
*521 “A. How was that?
“Q. Whether the trolley was on the tracks when the collision occurred, you don’t recall that exactly?
“A. No, now I don’t, not right.
“Mr. Body: I ask you to repeat that question to the witness.
“Mr. Weidner: He already answered it.
“A. Did you ask me whether the car was on the track when the contact came?
“Q. Yes; whether the trolley was on the track when the contact came; you don’t recall that, do you?
“A. It happened so quick, just like shutting your eyes and opening them.”
This was offered by Mr. Weidner “for the purpose of contradicting his testimony offered by this defendant, Reading Street Railway Company, when they adopted the deposition of the witness, Walter Steiger, which was taken on January 6, 1956, which, when it was offered by me in the case against the estate, was admitted under Your Honor’s ruling.” The testimony proposed to be contradicted was as follows:
“Q. Can you tell us how far it was away from the trolley you were operating when you first saw this automobile coming toward you; about how far was it away, approximately? Just give us an approximation, an estimate.
“A. I still say that it was 100 feet away from me.
“Q. Where was the automobile which was involved in the collision, where was it when you first saw it? In what part of the bridge was it when you first saw it?
“A. Right straight ahead of me.”
The court properly sustained the objection, because the one set .of answers did not contradict the other, nor does the 1956 deposition state that the wheels of trolley car were on rails at time of collision. Mr. Weidner then said he intended also by his offer to contradict the question : “Q. Where was this automobile, its left wheels,
Plaintiff’s third contention is that the opinion testimony of the witness Corlette was improperly received. This contention was also raised by the estate as defendant in the suit of Margaret Bodnar Rissel against it. We have discussed and rejected this- contention in the opinion filed this, day in that suit. It is sufficient here to say that in our opinion the witness was competent, and his .opinion reasonably called for by the circumstances of the accident. The jury apparently adopted, as it well could if it believed defendant’s evidence, the theory that the automobile got in the way of the trolley car, and not vice versa.
Fourthly, and finally, plaintiff contends that the court erred in permitting the use of a certain preliminary written pleading of Mrs. Rissel in order to contradict her oral testimony at the trial. Mrs. Rissel had testified in cross-examination that no portion of the Buick automobile, had been beyond the rails of the trolley tracks before the collision. .She had also, in direct examination, located the automobile on the bridge in an area between the trolley, car rail and the curb-.
In order to lessen the credibility of these statements, cross-examining counsel wished to present paragraph
“Q. Mrs. Rissel, by permission' of the court, I am reading Paragraph 7 (b) : ‘he operatéd said automobile partly on said trolley track into said approaching trolley.’ Does that appeár in the complaint that you signed and swore to? A. Yes.”
Plaintiff contends that this was error, and that no part of the paragraph was usable in the way permitted by the court, or in any other way. The reason advanced is that the former legal disapproval of' alternative charges no longer obtains, and that since such charges are now permitted (Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure 1020, 1021, 1024), a pleader who has pleaded facts in the alternative ought not be subject to having either alternative used as an admission against him. The question here, however, does not involve a pleading which charges different defendants alternatively, wherein, it may be noted, even the liberalizing permission of alternative charges is conditioned lipón a special averment as to the belief of the pleader, rule 1024(5). The present case, therefore, does not fall under the rules permitting alternative pleadings.
Here we have two separate suits, each against a
Mrs. Rissel in direct examination had expressed no doubt as to the position of her car at the time of the collision, but placed it off the tracks. It is commonplace for opposing counsel to confront a witness with an inconsistent written admission made elsewhere. Such practice is a reasonable and well established mode of inquiry into the facts. It may offer a spur to the witness’ memory of perhaps other complementary circumstances, and may lead to a modification of the testimony. On redirect examination, Mrs. Rissel was subsequently permitted to say that she had signed the complaint on the advice of counsel, and had not stated the facts of her own knowledge, but had got them on the advice of her attorney. This examination remained uncontradicted. The court rightly stopped this part of the examination at this point, in order to avoid the raising of extraneous or immaterial issues of fact. No. matter what are the details of the conference with her attorneys, it would have been improper for the court to pursue the matter further, in the absence of an offer to show accident or mistake. The court also explained in its charge the legitimate purpose of Mrs. Rissel and the legality of the method, whereby a plaintiff may sometimes present inconsistent theories for adjudication.
The rule for new trial should be discharged.
And now, to wit, November 26, 1957, plaintiff’s rule for new trial is discharged.
