DocketNumber: Appeal 291
Citation Numbers: 87 Pa. Super. 253, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 267
Judges: Orlady, Porter, Henderson, Trexler, Keller, Linn, Gawthrop
Filed Date: 11/20/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Argued November 20, 1925. Plaintiff was driving an ice wagon loaded with 3300 pounds of ice, drawn by one horse, north on Kensington Street, Philadelphia, at 7:30 o'clock in the morning. His route required him to turn west into Huntingdon Street. When his horse was level with the south curb of Huntingdon Street he looked around to see if any street car was coming north on Kensington Street — the same direction he had been traveling — and saw one 150 or 200 feet away approaching at a speed of twenty-five to thirty miles an hour. Without waiting to get into the northern half of the intersection block, — as would have been proper for one intending to drive westward on Huntingdon Street — he turned his horse toward the railway track to his left and as the horse's feet got on the first or east rail, saw the car thirty-five to fifty feet away and still coming about as fast as when he first looked. His own language best describes the situation: "I thought on account of it being a crossing there, that the car was going to stop and I kept on going." Before the wagon could clear the track the trolley car struck it, injuring the plaintiff and damaging his property. The plaintiff was aware that if the car kept on its course he could not get across the track without being struck, as it was impossible for his slow moving horse and wagon to travel their length, twenty feet, and clear the track, while the fast moving car traveled fifty feet; but he said he had plenty of chance to get across if the car stopped at the crossing at Huntingdon Street. In other words he took the chance of the car's stopping and his getting safely across, or of being hit if the car kept moving.
This brings the case within the principle of Long v. *Page 256
Phila. R.T. Co.,
If with the danger clearly apparent to him he took the chance of getting safely across and was injured, he was guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar his recovery of damages: Mease v. United Traction Co.,
The case of Hawkins v. Phila. R.T. Co.,
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to enter judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto. *Page 257
Evans v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co. , 283 Pa. 180 ( 1925 )
Mease v. United Traction Co. , 208 Pa. 434 ( 1904 )
Houston Bros. v. Consolidated Traction Co. , 1905 Pa. Super. LEXIS 204 ( 1905 )
Pilgrim Laundry Co. v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. , 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125 ( 1914 )
Hawkins v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. , 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 273 ( 1922 )
Ehrisman v. East Harrisburg City Passenger Railway Co. , 150 Pa. 180 ( 1892 )
Long v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. , 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63 ( 1916 )