DocketNumber: Appeal, 123
Judges: Rhodes, Hirt, Reno, Dithrich, Arnold, Fine
Filed Date: 3/25/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Argued March 25, 1949. In this action in trespass the jury found for the plaintiff in an amount compensating him for injuries to his person. The court, however, entered judgment in favor of the defendant n.o.v. The judgment will be affirmed.
In the light of the verdict these facts appear: Plaintiff was the driver of a truck in the service of the City of Philadelphia, used to cart away ashes from a residential section of the city. About 8:00 a.m. on February 19, 1947, while driving the truck eastwardly along Kingsessing Avenue between Sixty-first and Sixtieth Streets, plaintiff turned his truck to the south curb in front of a parked automobile, in a position where his helpers could conveniently load a quantity of ashes from the sidewalk on to the truck. When the truck stopped it was parked with the right front wheel against the curb with the body of the truck extending out into the cartway at an angle of about 45 degrees. The defendant transportation company has trolley tracks in Kingsessing Avenue. A few minutes after plaintiff's truck came to a stop, an eastbound street car struck the left rear corner of the body of the truck and plaintiff, who was standing on the truck, was thrown from his feet by the force of the impact and was injured. He testified that he observed the truck after parking it as he did, and concluded that it was clear of the trolley tracks. In his judgment no part of the truck was in danger of being struck by a passing street car. And the collision itself *Page 629 was the first notice plaintiff had that a trolley car could not pass his truck without striking it.
The testimony of defendant's motorman, though not relevant to the issue of the validity of the judgment, when read in connection with plaintiff's testimony emphasizes the reason for the principle enunciated in Patton v. Traction Co.,
The principle of the Patton case has been consistently applied. In Hause v. Lehigh Val. Transit Co.,
There are exceptional circumstances which will relieve a driver from the charge of contributory negligence in parking his truck on the highway where it may be struck by a passing street car. Cf. Rieck-McJunkin Dairy Co. v. George et al.,
Judgment affirmed.