Filed Date: 6/21/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
Thomas Smith, a member of the firm of Smith & Sons, the present plaintiffs, who are engaged in the trucking business, was called np by the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, and requested to bring one of the firm’s trucks to the plant yard of that company, located in Newark, for the purpose o£ having a load of paint put on it and taken to destination. In response to this request, Smith brought one of the plaintiff’s trucks to one of the loading platforms in the yard of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, where in due course it was loaded with paint; and he then started to drive out of the plant yard through a gate in the fence, which was the only means of access to an egress from it. The defendant company had constructed a track through the Pittsburgh
Thomas Smith, the driver of the truck, testified that as he approached the track he received no warning of the approach of the train; that he could not see it as it approached, on account of the buildings in the yard, until it was within approximately thirty-five feet of the point where he was crossing, and that it did not come within his view until he arrived at that point; that when he saw it he was partly over the track, and that before he could clear the track, the truck being some twenty-five feet long, the collision occurred. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the amount of the award being $1,675.
The first ground upon which-we are asked to set this verdict aside is that the trial judge failed to point out what the standard of action or conduct of the defendant was from which the jury might infer negligence. This contention seems to us to be without merit. The court, after referring to the testimony in the case, stated that both parties had a right to be where thejr were, but that, in the operation of the cars and of the truck, the operator of each was bound to use reasonable care not to inflict injury upon the other, or upon the property in charge of the other. The court further instructed the jury that the plaintiffs, in order to recover, must prove that the persons in charge of the defendant company’s cars did not use reasonable care to prevent the collision; and also that it must appear that the collision was solely their fault and was not contributed to by the driver of the plaintiff’s truck. In our opinion, this instruction was all that the defendant was entitled to, fully covered the matters specified in this reason for setting the verdict aside.
It is further contended that the verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence upon the issues of the defendant’s
These are the only questions argued before us, and we conclude that the rule to show cause should be discharged.