Chadwick v. Popadick

159 A.2d 907, 399 Pa. 88, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1960
DocketAppeals, 79, 80 and 81
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 159 A.2d 907 (Chadwick v. Popadick) 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
Chadwick v. Popadick, 159 A.2d 907, 399 Pa. 88, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 430 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Musmanno,

The litigation involved in this appeal was before us in 390 Pa. 511, so that it is unnecessary to again narrate the facts which brought about the accident underlying the legal controversies involved. It is enough to say that three cars, being operated respectively, by Mi *90 chael Popadick, Harold Chadwick, and Francis Simones, participated in the accident. The cars were traveling Indian file. Popadick, heading the file, suddenly stopped; Chadwick, immediately following, then stopped; and Simones, who was following Chadwick, ploughed into Chadwick, and Chadwick struck Popadick with the result that Chadwick left the road and plunged over an embankment.

Chadwick sued Popadick and Simones; Simones sued Chadwick; and Frank Grimone, who was a passenger in Chadwick’s car, sued Popadick, Simones and Chadwick.

At the first trial, the court directed a verdict in favor of Popadick and we reversed, ordering a new trial. At the second trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant Popadick and against the defendant Simones, with whom the plaintiffs had already made settlement.

The plaintiffs have now asked for another trial.

It is Chadwick’s contention that the accident would never have occurred if Popadick had not suddenly stopped in his tracks without giving the following cars adequate warning. Popadick, on the other hand, maintains that he had to stop because two deer were in the roadway ahead of him and he thus claims immunity from liability for the ensuing collisions on the basis that he was confronted with an emergency.

Chadwick submits that there was no emergency because the deer which stopped Popadick’s car were not ahead of him but in the fields adjoining the road. He testified: “Well, as I came around the curve below Sterling Bun and was able to see the straight stretch ahead of me, I noticed two deer crossing the highway ahead of us and just after they crossed the highway and went down over the bank, Mr. Popadick passed me and went a short distance and Mr. Popadick came to a stop and when I saw his stop light coming on, I applied my *91 brakes but before I could get stopped, I was hit from behind by Mr. Simones’ car and driven intó- the. back of Mr. Popadick’s car. Now when Mr. Simones- hit me I tried to turn the wheels to the left to avoid hitting him and I hit the left rear corner of his car. I went . . . over the bank where I came to rest.” (Emphasis supplied.) -

Frank Grimone, who was a passenger in Chadwick’s car, testified: “Well, after we came around the curve at Sinnemahoning, I was glancing out my window to my right and I happened to notice that a car was starting to pass us from the left and that was Mr. Popadick. I casually glanced . . . out the window and as I was looking toward my right off to the .edge of the road 1 happened to notice two deer standing there.” (Emphasis supplied.) -

Popadick assumed that the two deer were mother and offspring. He said that the “mother deer” was on the berm of the road, but that the “young deer” remained on the road “romping around.” Thus, a question of fact arose as to whether the fawn remained on the road “jumping around and frolicking or gamboling there,” as the trial judge described it, or whether both deer were off the highway.

Popadick testified that when he first saw the deer-they were from 250 to 275 feet ahead of him. Was this enough distance within which he could notify the motorists in his wake that he intended to stop and thus avert the telescoping of cars behind him? Popadick said that he saw the deer for about a minute and a half before he gave warning to the following cars: “Q. How many seconds would you say you looked at the deer? A. I kept watching the deer ever since I first saw them when I began giving them the signal or possibly just before that. Q. Could you say how many seconds that was? A. Oh, it possibly may have been a minute and a half, around that vicinity. Q. You were watching the *92 deer for about a minute and a half, that’s your best estimate? A. Yes, because they were right in front of me, however long it took me to where I had stopped, that’s how long I was watching them.”

Could Popadick claim protection under the sudden emergency rule on this state of facts? In any event, he would have to establish the alleged emergency by a preponderance of the evidence. In Mashinsky et al. v. Philadelphia, 333 Pa. 97, we said: “The burden is on the party who pleads the existence of an emergency to justify his violation of The rules of the road.’ ”

The learned trial judge in the court below inadvertently overlooked this rule. He stated several times that the plaintiff had .the burden of proving negligence, but he did not specify that, given the nature of the defense in this case, the defendant also had a burden to carry. The failure to enlighten the jury on the responsibility of the defendant in these particular circumstances, and the judge’s emphasizing the onus resting on the plaintiff to prove his case could possibly have led and probably did lead the jury into assuming that it was up to the plaintiff to prove that an emergency did not exist.

The trial judge did not instruct the jury that if the evidence established that Popadick was negligent and that the emergency advanced by him arose out of his own failure to exercise due care in the operation of his vehicle, he could not then be excused from liability because of such emergency. This kind of a situation was illustrated in the case of Schu et ux. v. Pittsburgh, 143 Pa. Superior Ct. 101, 105, where the Superior Court said: “The appellant contends that the accident was unavoidable; that its driver was confronted with a sudden emergency when the motorcycle appeared; and that the situation that confronted him required only the exercise of his best judgment under the circumstances: Mulheirn v. Brown et al., 322 Pa. 171, 185 A. 304. This *93 rule does not apply, however, where, as here, the defendant’s conduct brought about or created the sudden emergency. Casey y. Siciliano, 310 Pa. 238, 241, 165 A. 1 and cases cited.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In Smith v. Gross, 113 Pa. Superior Ct. 568, we find another such case: “Here the driver created and was responsible for the emergency when he attempted to pass and came up abreast of the other car on a descending grade on a wet, oily road with another car approaching. When one by his own negligence creates an emergency, he is not excused by reason of the fact that he is in an emergency and has not time to act as he otherwise would do.” (Emphasis supplied.)

And more recently, in Levine v. Mervis, 373 Pa. 99, at 102, this Court said: “ ‘We have frequently stated that the sudden emergency rule will not apply if the emergency arises through the prior negligence of him who seeks the protection of the rule. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.2d 907, 399 Pa. 88, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-v-popadick-pa-1960.