Cleavenger v. Zebraskey

160 A.2d 699, 399 Pa. 380, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1960
DocketAppeal, No. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 160 A.2d 699 (Cleavenger v. Zebraskey) 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
Cleavenger v. Zebraskey, 160 A.2d 699, 399 Pa. 380, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 464 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

This is an appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County which entered a judgment n.o.v. in favor of the defendants after the jury had returned a verdict for the plaintiffs in a trespass action based on an automobile collision in which the plaintiffs’ decedent was killed as a result of the alleged negligence of one Walter G. Zebraskey.

To announce the rule that in reviewing the evidence in a case of this character, we are to read it in the light most advantageous to the verdict-winners seems as superfluous as declaring that we are a court of review. However, we still mention the rule in order to give completeness to the opinion and'at the same time point out that a court en banc is equally a court of review and that, in passing upon a motion for judgment n.o.v. it must also be guided by that same rule. It would appear, however, that the court below treated the jury’s verdict as mere speculation and it proceeded to re-evaluate, re-appraise, and re-decide the facts as if it were a tribunal passing initially on a controverted factual situation, which, of course, it has no right to do.

[382]*382The essential facts in the case at bar are brief and not complicated. On January 6, 1958, at about 7 p.m., Fred D. Cleavenger, forty years of age, was driving his automobile, known as a .British M.G. in a southwardly direction on Route 121 (the Morgantown Road), at a speed indicated to be slightly more than 50 miles per hour. At a point in Dunkard Township, Route-616 (the Taylortown Road) leads, into the Morgantown Road, forming a T intersection. At the time stated, Walter G. Zebraskey, driving a Ford Sunliner convertible, was traveling in an eastward direction on the Taylortown Road, with the intention of turning left at the T intersection and proceeding northwardly on the .Morgantown Road. At this point, an embankment on the left of the Taylortown Road impedes a full view of the Morgantown Road, as one would look in a northward direction. Zebraskey halted at. the Stop Sign, which notified him of the through highway ahead, and then started forward just as Cleavenger came down the highway (there is a descending 5% grade along this stretch.) The inevitable and ensuing collision actually occurred on the farther side of the Morgantown Road, that is, in the northbound lane. Cleavenger sustained fatal injuries. Zebraskey escaped without a scratch.

Since the Morgantown Road is a through highway, it was Zebraskey’s duty to give way to the Cleavenger car unless, of course, he was so far ahead of Cleavenger when he reached the intersection, that he could cross over in safety. Was he that far ahead to justify his proceeding forward? When Zebraskey arrived at the intersection, did he observe the rules of the highway? Did Cleavenger use due care? These and kindred questions were for the jury to decide and we cannot say, from studying the record, that they ignored the evidence and returned a verdict contrary to law.

[383]*383In its opinion, the lower court said: “Under the facts in this case, assuming every inference favorable to the plaintiff, there is not one particle of proof in the evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant.”

We do not know how the lower court defines “particle,” but it would seem to us that if the defendant knew or should have known a car was approaching on the Morgantown Road from his left; if, knowing this, he proceeded into the highway, without looking to the left, which he was required to do in any. event since, in right angularly crossing a highway the traffic normally would first be coming toward him from the left; if he was traveling at such a rate of speed that, once becoming aware of a car from his left, he was unable to stop quickly, and accordingly increased his speed in an attempt to get across first; if he did all these things, we would say that there was something more than a “particle” of proof that his headlong and heedless action constituted negligence of. a particularly flagrant character.

The evidence shows he did do all these things.

The defendant may have used care in approaching the fateful intersection, but considerably more than that care is required to exculpate him from the negligence which the jury found against him. Zebraskey did halt at the Stop Sign which flagged traffic about to enter the Morgantown Road, but he apparently did this more in token recognition of the rule of the highway than in conscientious appreciation of the significance of stopping because, after stopping, he then shot ahead, thus cancelling out the caution which the stopping is intended to induce.

David Adams, who was on the Morgantown Road travelling northwardly when the accident occurred, testified: “I noticed a black Ford at the intersection at a complete stop, and I noticed as he started oozing out [384]*384slowly, and he started shooting out, and I saw lights coming about the same time.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Adams said further: “He was pulling out of the intersection slowly, and then about the time he met these lights, about the time I noticed them, he started shooting across.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Although the darkness of a January night had already enveloped the crucial area, Zebraskey knew of Cleavenger’s presence on the Morgantown Road because, while momentarily halted at the Stop Sign he had seen the reflections of 'Cleavenger’s ear at the crest of the road (425 feet north from the intersection). Several days after the accident, Zebraskey recalled the prologue to the tragedy as follows: “I came up to entrance and stopped at stop sign, I saw reflections of Cleavenger’s lights over crest of hill on my left. Then I looked to my right, then I proceeded out into the intersection.”

Thus, being informed of Cleavenger’s presence on the highway, Zebraskey should have been on his guard as he was about to enter the Morgantown Road. On the contrary, after catching sight of Cleavenger’s lights at the crest of the hill on his left, he went forward without looking to his left again until he had entered the through highway, — and the disaster was -about to occur. Whether, at this juncture, he might not still have averted the collision by turning to the right on the Morgantown Road instead of crossing it at right angles in front of Cleavenger’s car was a question for the jury to decide, which did decide that, regardless of hypothetical avenues of escape, it was Zebraskey’s initial fault which set off the train of events culminating in Cleavenger’s death. Incidentally, the mouth of the Taylortown Road, as it debouches into Morgantown Road, is very wide and would allow for considerable maneuverability of cars.

[385]*385The lower court says: “There is nothing to substantiate a finding that the defendant entered the through highway and crossed the decedent’s path when he should haye known it was not safe to do so.”

Instead of “nothing,” the record, in fact, shows a great deal to substantiate the finding that the defendant entered the through highway and crossed the decedent’s path when he should have known it was unsafe to do so. Mrs. Buehl Stewart, who arrived at the scene of the accident shortly after it occurred, testified that Zebraskey admitted that he: “drove out on the road there and he just got it on the road and he seen them lights coming, and he tried to make it across the road, he thought he would miss him.”

Another witness, Curtis H.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A.2d 699, 399 Pa. 380, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleavenger-v-zebraskey-pa-1960.