Blaskey v. Pennsylvania Railroad

10 A.2d 891, 138 Pa. Super. 465, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1939
DocketAppeals, 237 and 238
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 891 (Blaskey v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaskey v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 10 A.2d 891, 138 Pa. Super. 465, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion bx

Parker, J.,

In these two actions in trespass to recover damages for personal injuries, the plaintiffs were guest passengers in a truck driven by the owner when the truck collided with a freight train standing on a public crossing. The facts in the two cases are identical and the cases were tried by one jury. We will therefore dispose of the *467 appeals in one opinion. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ testimony the trial judge entered compulsory nonsuits which the court subsequently refused to remove. We are of the opinion that nonsuits should not have been granted.

We will refer to the testimony in a light most favorable to plaintiffs, as we are required to do in consideration of a motion to take off a nonsuit. The truck in which the plaintiffs were riding was being driven by the owner on Oregon Avenue, in Philadelphia, at about 3 A. M. on September 9, 1934. The night was dark, it had been raining, there was a very heavy fog, and there was so much moisture in the air that the guests could see, from where they were sitting, very little if anything, due to the condition of the windshield in front of them. The car was equipped with one windshield wiper located in front of the driver and even at that location visibility, with the assistance of driving lights, was limited to 25 or 30 feet. The visibility was so poor that a witness who crossed the street within a quarter of a block of a freight train crossing the street had to depend on hearing to account for movements of the train, and he could not see a standing automobile until he came close to it.

Oregon Avenue, 84 feet in width, is crossed at right angles by Swanson Street upon which defendant maintained two tracks. Neither of the plaintiffs had ever been in that vicinity and they had no previous knowledge of the existence of a railroad crossing at that point. Blaskey testified that the truck was moving at a rate of about 20 or 25 miles an hour, but Yenehik could not fix its speed. Suddenly the driver veered his car to the left and in an instant it collided with a freight train which was standing on the street and blocking passage, with resulting personal injuries to each of the plaintiffs. When the brakes were applied the guests could only see, by looking through the space in front of the driver, a *468 black object ahead, of them. At the time the driver veered his car he was about 25 or 30 feet from the train.

Plaintiffs produced evidence tending to show that the train had been standing on the crossing for eight or ten minutes. We do not agree with the conclusion of the court below that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain a finding by a jury that the train had been blocking the crossing for that length of time. While plaintiffs’ witness depended upon hearing to fix the time when the train stopped, we are satisfied that his testimony was sufficient to make the length of the stopping and continued blocking of the street a question of fact for the jury. Sight is not the sole method of perception recognized by law. This principle is recognized in the rule that one must stop, look, and listen before crossing a railroad track. “It is as much the traveler’s duty to listen as to look; he is as bound to hear what is audible as to see what is visible. Because of darkness or other obstructions to view, the sense of hearing is often vital” : Rhodes v. Penna. R. R. Co., 298 Pa. 101, 104, 147 A. 854; Garis v. Lehigh & W. E. R. R. Co., 324 Pa. 149, 152, 188 A. 76.

The plaintiffs, to sustain their charge of negligence, relied in the main upon the Act of March 20, 1845, P. L. 191, §1, as amended by Act of June 9, 1911, P. L. 726, §1 (67 PS §452), and various decisions establishing responsibility for damages occasioned by blocking a public highway. The Act of 1911 provides: “It shall not be lawful for any railroad company to block up the passage of any crossings of public streets or roads, or obstruct the said crossings, with their locomotives or cars.”

As stated in Purol, Inc., v. Great East. Syst., Inc., 130 Pa. Superior Ct. 341, 344, 197 A. 543: “The mere fact that the plaintiff on the one hand, or the defendant on the other, was engaged in violating the law in a given particular at the time of the happening of the accident, will not bar the right of action of the former, nor make *469 the latter liable to pay damages, unless such violation of law was an efficient cause of the injury.”

The bearing which a violation of this statute has on a charge of negligence has been considered by the Supreme Court in a number of cases. In Todd v. Phila. & R. Ry. Co., 201 Pa. 558, 51 A. 332, the defendant’s train was blocking a crossing and the plaintiff, a minor, waited for a time for the crossing to be cleared and then started to climb over the train. As he was doing so the train was started without warning and the boy was injured. The court said (p. 560): “The obstruction of a street crossing by a railroad company, in unnecessarily stopping its cars upon it, is unlawful. In plain terms, the Act of March 20, 1845, declares the blocking up of a public crossing with locomotives or cars to be illegal, and prohibits it, under a penalty. The obstruction complained of in this case was prima facie evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence, and, to establish its innocence, the burden was upon it to satisfy a jury that the obstruction had not continued for an unreasonable time, and could not have been avoided by the exercise of proper care and diligence. In other words, the burden was upon the company to prove that, under all the circumstances, there had not been an absence of care on its part. No such proof was offered; if any had been presented, the sufficiency of it would have been for the jury.”

To the same effect are Phila., B. & W. R. R. Co. v. Layer, 112 Pa. 414, 3 A. 874, Bauch v. Lloyd & Hill, 31 Pa. 358, 370, and Penna. R. R. Co. v. Kelly, 31 Pa. 372. It is of importance to note that in the Kelly case it was urged that the obstruction was the remote and not the proximate cause of the injury. The Supreme Court there said (p. 377) : “Now adjust the acts of stopping and starting ever so nicely to the maxim causa próxima, and not a step of advance is taken by the defence, for the company are equally liable for both causes. If you say it was the starting, and not the. stopping of the *470 cars, that did the mischief, the question of plaintiff’s negligence in suffering his son to be under them is still in the case, but you have made no progress in the defence, because if there was wrong in the start, the company are as responsible for it as for any wrong in the stop. The nature of the case, however, does not admit of this nice distinction. The conduct of that train of cars was one thing — intrusted as a special duty to one man — and if his mismanagement injured the plaintiff, without fault on the plaintiff’s part, the company are liable for it. To split such a single, simple, individual cause into two causes, and to christen them próxima and remota,

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 891, 138 Pa. Super. 465, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaskey-v-pennsylvania-railroad-pasuperct-1939.