Biehl, Admr. v. Rafferty

37 A.2d 729, 349 Pa. 493, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1944
DocketAppeal, 112
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 729 (Biehl, Admr. v. Rafferty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biehl, Admr. v. Rafferty, 37 A.2d 729, 349 Pa. 493, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 487 (Pa. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Deew,

In this suit in trespass, after a verdict was returned in favor of plaintiff, Administrator of the Estate of Ruth Biehl, deceased, in the sum of $10,876, against three of the defendants, Rafferty, Armstrong and Donahue, and in favor of the fourth defendant, Dunlap, the learned court below, on motion, granted a new trial and refused judgment n. o. v. to the three defendants, and from its action in refusing judgment this appeal was taken.

At the time of this accident, November 14, 1942, Armstrong was the holder of a certificate of Public Convenience, issued by the Public Utility Commission of Pennsylvania, to carry passengers for hire between Emporium in Cameron County and the City of DuBois in Clearfield County. The certificate was operated by Rafferty and the motor bus involved was driven by Donahue.

The decedent, Ruth Biehl, was an employee of the Sylvania Products Company at Emporium. That Saturday afternoon, at about four o’clock, she and some thirty-four other girls, left their employment to go to their *495 homes in and near DuBois, some fifty miles away, to spend the weekend. They took passage on the bus owned and operated by the three defendants. .Ruth was going to DuBois and she paid the fare of eighty cents. At Saint Mary’s, thirty-five miles from DuBois, the bus became “disabled” because of engine trouble. A number of the girls, including Ruth, got out of the bus and obtained rides in passing automobiles as far as Hollywood, a village twenty miles from DuBois. Here the bus, having-been repaired, caught up with them, and the girls, including Ruth, resumed their passage in the bus toward DuBois. The bus broke down again when about eight miles from DuBois. It was then eight o’clock of a very cold dark night. There was some snow and ice on the cement highway. The bus was due at DuBois at about six P. M. The girls had not had anything to eat for a long time; they were then two hours late and they were in a hurry to get home. A number of them, including Ruth and Violet Bell, who seemed to be more or less her companion, got out of the bus and stood near its left rear end, either intending to solicit a ride from a passing motorist or hoping to be voluntarily picked up by some such person and given a ride into DuBois. There is nothing in the record to show these girls actively solicited a ride.

When the bus stopped, all four wheels were upon the cement highway. The driver, Donahue, got out and examined its position. He then, while steering the bus himself, pushed it over to the side, with the help of some of the girls, until it was in a position where only the left wheels were upon the highway. The bus then, according to the testimony of a number of witnesses, occupied from two to five feet of the highway. The driver sent to DuBois for help. He remained sitting in the driver’s seat and made no effort to remove the bus entirely off the highway, or set out “flares”. He could easily have done both these things. He testified that all lights on the bus were burning; that the lights on the rear of the bus could be seen from a distance of five hundred feet; *496 that the highway was straight for a much greater distance both in front and rear of the bus. He said he pressed the stop light with his foot each time he saw a motor car coming towards the bus.

It would seem to have been about ten minutes from the time the bus stopped until this fatal accident. The other defendant, Wilbert Dunlap, a boy seventeen years old, driving his sister’s car on his own driver’s license, with four other young men in the car with him, all going from Emporium to DuBois, approached the rear of the bus at a speed of thirty-five miles an hour. He testified he did not see the bus at all until he Avas about one hundred feet from it and that when he Avas about fifty feet away, he attempted to turn to avoid a collision, but was blinded by the lights of an automobile traveling toward him. Why he had not previously seen this approaching car Avith its lights on “high beam” he did not say. He did not know whether he saw the two girls or not. The other girl, Yiolet Bell, saw the Dunlap car approaching and that an accident was imminent and jumped into the ditch at the side of the road and escaped. Ruth Biehl Avas struck and so badly crushed that she died within an hour. Dunlap’s car skidded and turned sideways on the road, and collided Avith the end of the bus.

Plaintiff charged the three defendants with negligence in failing to remove the bus from the highway, and in failing to place flares as required by laAV. He charged Dunlap with negligent operation of an automobile, in driving at a rate of speed that was high and excessive under the circumstances, and in driving in such a reckless fashion that he did not have his vehicle under control.

Yery shortly after the accident the bus was pushed entirely off the cement highway by Donahue and tAVO men. This showed that it was not only upon the road at the time of the accident but could easily have been removed prior to the accident. It was admitted by Donahue that he had flares in the bus and that he did not put *497 them, out because he thought that the lights on the bus were sufficient. However, shortly after the accident he placed the flares, and this although then the bus was entirely off the highway. Dunlap testified that there were no flares when he approached, and that is admitted by all.

The Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905, states the law governing the operation of motor vehicles on the public highways, and prohibits the parking or leaving standing of any vehicle on the paved or improved portion of the highway (sub-section C of section 1019), unless “it is impossible to avoid stopping and temporarily leaving such vehicle in such position.” The Code requires the setting out of flares under certain circumstances. “Whether the driver of this stalled bus showed due care under the attendant circumstances, whether the evidence supported the averment that defendant’s servant permitted the bus to remain where it was without warning (i.e., adequate warning) to vehicles approaching from the rear, were questions of fact for the jury:” Harkins v. Somerset Bus Co., 308 Pa. 109, 115, 162 A. 163.

But the three defendants argue that, regardless of this, plaintiff cannot recover against them because their negligence was not the proximate cause of the accident. They argue that even conceding the bus was carelessly left on the traveled portion of the highway, it was where Dunlap could and should have seen it when he was at least five hundred feet away, and that it took his independent act of negligence to produce the accident. They argue that the position of the bus was a mere circumstance or a condition which existed at the place of the accident, but was not an active or controlling proximate cause.

This Court said in Kline v. Moyer, 325 Pa. 357, 363, 191 A. 43, in a well-considered opinion by Mr. Justice Horace Stern: “It is clear that when an unlighted, parked truck is seen by the operator of an approaching *498 vehicle, the fact of its being unlighted becomes thereafter of legal inconsequence, because the purpose of a light as warning has been otherwise accomplished.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rivera v. PHILADELPHIA THEOLOGICAL SEM.
507 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
Benson v. Penn Central Transportation Co.
342 A.2d 393 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)
Kite v. Jones
132 A.2d 683 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)
Fisher v. Dye
125 A.2d 472 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Mastrocinque v. McCANN
122 A.2d 55 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Liebendofer v. Wilson
107 A.2d 133 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Nikisher v. Benninger
105 A.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Kopka v. Bell Telephone Co. of Pa.
91 A.2d 232 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Phillips v. Cowden
88 A.2d 404 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Miller v. Pennsylvania Railroad
368 Pa. 507 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
Loney Et Ux. v. Denenberg
71 A.2d 842 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Frank v. W. S. Losier Co., Inc.
64 A.2d 829 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Medved v. Doolittle
19 N.W.2d 788 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1945)
Gladd v. Paslawski
43 A.2d 570 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
Kimble v. Wilson
42 A.2d 526 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
Nebel v. Burrelli
41 A.2d 873 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 729, 349 Pa. 493, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biehl-admr-v-rafferty-pa-1944.