DocketNumber: Appeal, 93
Judges: Stearns, Maxey, Drew, Linn, Stern, Patterson, Stearne, Jones
Filed Date: 4/15/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The question raised by this appeal is whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law.
Plaintiff, Joseph V. O'Connor, brought an action in trespass against defendant, Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him in a collision between a truck, driven by plaintiff while in the employ of the Penn Supreme Dairies, and a street car of the defendant company. A compulsory nonsuit was entered on the ground of plaintiff's contributory negligence. Plaintiff appeals from the refusal of the court below to take off the nonsuit.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, as we are required to do, the facts are: The defendant company maintains double car tracks on a private right of way which runs in an east-west direction in Upper Darby Township, Delaware County. The tracks run parallel to Garrett Road for a distance and then cross, at grade and right angles, Windemere Avenue which runs in a north-south direction. The car tracks approach Windemere Avenue on a downward grade and are straight for several hundred yards to the west. A warning signal light which shows red and green was in operation at the intersection of Windemere Avenue and the tracks directly over the center of the tracks and the highway.
Plaintiff was operating his employer's truck west on Garrett Road at about 10:30 a. m. on November 9, 1945, a clear dry day. He made a right hand turn into Windemere Avenue and proceeded northwardly, crossing the two tracks of the defendant company. He drove about *Page 406 126 feet and realizing he was lost, sought directions. Thereafter he turned around and retraced his route southwardly on the right hand side of Windemere Avenue. As he approached the crossing he was traveling at a slow rate of speed. Plaintiff stopped the truck before any part of it entered the first rail of the first set of car tracks. He observed that the warning signal was green and in his favor for crossing. He then looked for approaching trolleys but saw none. His view to the right or west was partially obstructed by poles, a tree, and some heavy brush, but he could see approximately two hundred (200) feet in a westerly direction up the track. After thus looking for approaching trolleys and seeing none, and with the signal light still green in his favor, he started the truck at a rate of three or four miles per hour. He again looked for approaching trolleys before his truck entered the first rail of the eastbound track. At this point, he saw for the first time, a trolley approaching from the west and moving in an easterly direction about one hundred ten (110) feet away. He immediately applied the brakes. The truck halted and the front bumper, while not across the first rail of the second set of tracks (east bound), was in the path of the overhang of the trolley. Plaintiff tried to put his truck in reverse but failed. He endeavored to signal the motorman but was unsuccessful because the motorman had his back turned. A collision occurred. The left front overhang of the trolley struck the right front of the truck. The evidence was amply sufficient to warrant a finding that the motorman was negligent. A witness, a passenger on the trolley car, testified that he saw plaintiff's truck when the defendant trolley was still fifty (50) feet away from the crossing; that he endeavored to secure the motorman's attention, but the motorman had his head turned around toward the rear of the car talking to a trainee; that no warning was *Page 407 sounded by the trolley nor did it slacken its speed. The witness also testified that the signal light was red against the trolley and that the trolley was being operated at a speed of forty (40) miles per hour and that it continued for a distance of two hundred (200) feet before being brought to a stop after the collision.
It is a rule of law that travelers must look for approaching street cars before entering upon the first rail. A companion rule is that at such time the traveler must have his vehicle under such control that he can stop before getting in the path of the approaching trolley car: Smith v. Lehigh Valley TransitCo.,
Contributory negligence may be declared judicially only when so clearly revealed that fair and reasonable persons cannot disagree as to its existence: Cf. Carden v. PhiladelphiaTransportation Company, supra, p. 409. The circumstances of this case do not disclose such clear violation of the duty imposed by law on plaintiff that it must be declared judicially. On the contrary, the evidence reveals that plaintiff stopped and looked before entering the tracks; that no trolleys were in sight; that he proceeded cautiously at the rate of three or four miles per hour with the green signallight in his favor; that upon seeing, for the first time, the approach of defendant's trolley from the west, one hundred ten (110) feet away, he did everything which a reasonable, prudent man under the circumstances could be expected to do. *Page 408
There was no fixed duty on the plaintiff to stop before he passed over the east-bound rails: Talley v. Chester TractionCompany,
Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) MAXEY said in theGalliano case, supra, p. 504: "If the autoist entered the intersection first, he was justified in assuming that his right of way was superior to the street car's, even if the green light had beckoned the street car after the automobile entered the intersection. That it is the duty of a street car not yet in an intersection to yield to *Page 409 the rights of other vehicles entering such intersection is settled in Pennsylvania."
In the Zurcher case, supra, at p. 214, Mr. Justice JONES said: "About eight o'clock on the evening of March 2, 1944, it then being dark, the plaintiff was driving his automobile eastwardly on Beacon Street. It was snowing at the time and the streets were slippery from ice. When the plaintiff had reached a point about forty feet from the first rail of the near (outbound) track on Murray Avenue, he looked to his right and saw a street car about two hundred feet away, coming northwardly on the inbound track on Murray Avenue toward the intersection. The light in the traffic signal was showing greenfor travel on Beacon Street. The plaintiff approached the crossing at a speed of approximately ten miles an hour. When he had reached the first rail of the track nearest him, he reduced the speed of his automobile to two or three miles an hour. The street car was then a hundred to a hundred and twenty-five feet away. While crossing the first track at his reduced rate of speed, he saw that the street car, which was travelling at a speed of from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour, would likely be unable to stop at the intersection notwithstanding that the signal light was set against it. Believing that a collision was inevitable if he proceeded further, the plaintiff 'slammed on [his] brakes' but, on account of the icy condition of the street, his automobile skidded into the street car, striking it on its side about the third or fourth window from the front with resultant injuries to the plaintiff for which he brought the suit here involved.
"From the foregoing recital of the facts in this case, as established by the jury's verdict, it is clear that the trial court could not have justifiably held the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Whether he was negligent in fact was of course for *Page 410 the jury to determine from all of the circumstances attending the collision." (Italics supplied.)
In the present case, plaintiff started to cross the tracks only after he observed no approaching trolley with the signal light in his favor, whereas in the two cases above cited, the autoists proceeded on the green light even after seeing theapproach of the trolley cars.
The facts in Woomer v. Altoona Logan Valley ElectricRailway Co.,
The facts in the present case do not require this Court to decide, as matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as in cases where: the approaching trolley car was so plainly in view that if plaintiff did not see it he was negligent, and if he did see it he was negligent in driving upon the tracks when the trolley was in dangerous proximity (Moses v. Northwestern Pennsylvania Railway Company,
Defendant's negligence and plaintiff's contributory negligence were issues for the jury.
Judgment reversed with a procedendo. *Page 412
Balkie v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. ( 1938 )
Kilpatrick v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. ( 1927 )
Newman v. Protective Motor Service Co. ( 1929 )
Smith v. Lehigh Valley Transit Co. ( 1929 )
Byrne v. Schultz (Stone) ( 1932 )
Galliano v. East Penn Electric Co. ( 1931 )
Woomer v. Altoona & Logan Valley Electric Railway Co. ( 1922 )
Carden v. Philadelphia Transportation Co. ( 1945 )
Dopler v. Pittsburgh Railways Co. ( 1931 )
Leaman Transportation Corp. v. Philadelphia Transportation ... ( 1948 )
Goldfine & Brenner, Inc. v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. ( 1935 )
Bornscheuer v. Consolidated Traction Co. ( 1901 )
Talley v. Chester Traction Co. ( 1910 )
Moses v. Northwestern Pennsylvania Railway Co. ( 1917 )
Zurcher v. Pittsburgh Railways Co. ( 1945 )
Reinard v. Lehigh Valley Transit Co. ( 1939 )
Davis v. Pittsburgh Railways Co. ( 1937 )
Rea v. Pittsburgh Railways Co. ( 1941 )
Brungo v. Pittsburgh Railways Co. ( 1938 )