Clee v. Brinks, Inc.

5 A.2d 387, 135 Pa. Super. 345, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 305
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 21, 1938
DocketAppeal, 151
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 387 (Clee v. Brinks, Inc.) 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
Clee v. Brinks, Inc., 5 A.2d 387, 135 Pa. Super. 345, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 305 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The cause of action out of which this negligence case arose was a right-angle collision by an armored International truck, owned by the defendant and operated upon its business by one of its drivers, with a Chevrolet automobile, owned and driven by the plaintiff, in the intersection of Westmoreland Street and North Park Avenue, Philadelphia, and alleged by plaintiff to have been caused by the failure of defendant’s driver to exercise due care under the circumstances.

The trial resulted in a verdict of $1350 for the plaintiff, covering damages to his car and his personal injuries ; defendant’s motions for a new trial, or judgment in its favor n. o. v., were denied and it has appealed from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

Although counsel for appellant have filed five assign- *347 meats of error, their statement of questions involved includes only the fourth and fifth in which they charge, in substance, that the trial judge, after having stated to the jury that the testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses convicted him of negligence, as a matter of law, erroneously instructed them to consider and determine, as a matter of fact, whether plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the happening of the accident and his consequent injuries. Their contention is that the trial judge should have declared plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and affirmed, upon that ground, their point for binding instructions.

Plaintiff introduced evidence from which, if believed, a jury could reasonably find that appellant’s driver approached and entered the intersection at a rate of speed so excessive as to amount to negligence; we, therefore, assume, for the purposes of this appeal, that he was negligent.

The manner in which this case was submitted to the jury renders necessary a review of the evidence, by and on behalf of plaintiff, and the quotation of the challenged portions of the charge. Westmoreland Street is an east and west street, 26 feet in width from curb to curb, with sidewalks 12 feet wide; Park Avenue runs north and south, 34 feet between curbs and having 13 foot pavements; each is a two-way street; there was no traffic control, by lights or otherwise, at the intersection; buildings were erected on each corner; there was no other traffic in or near the intersection, nor were any cars parked near it; the accident occurred about 2:30 o’clock on the afternoon of December 23, 1936, a clear and dry day.

Plaintiff was driving east on Westmoreland Street and appellant’s truck was proceeding north on Park Avenue. The first witness called by plaintiff was Fred Getz, an experienced truck driver, who was standing on the northeast corner of the intersection and had an unobstructed view of the occurrence. Excerpts from *348 his testimony read: “I saw a motor vehicle coming east on Westmoreland Street, so I stayed on the northeast corner waiting for it to go past me. As I looked down the street I saw a truck coming. Q. Which way was he coming, on what street? A. North on Park Avenue. ......Q. Go ahead and tell us what you observed about the car that was coming east on Westmoreland. A. The car had came, the passenger car had came to a stop at the southwest corner and then he proceeded ahead. I stayed on the northeast corner waiting for this car to pass. As it got about, well, I would say 14 or 15 feet, pretty near to the mid-section, this truck hit it. Q. You say it got the mid-section of what street? A. Park Avenue. Q. Was the front or the rear of the passenger car at the middle of Park Avenue when it was hit? A. I would say the rear of the car was because his front was more towards the east side of Park Avenue. Q. What part of the passenger car was hit? A. The rear, the rear right. Q. What effect did the collision have on that car? A. Well, it skidded it across West-moreland Street to the northeast corner.......Q. Did you see any marks, tire marks, in the street at the point or near the point of collision? A. Well, there was skid marks where the truck had applied his brakes. I judge from where he applied his brakes and with the pushing he did with the car was at least 14 feet. Q. You mean those skid marks extended 14 feet before he hit the car? A. Well, I wouldn’t say before; I would say about 10 feet before he hit the car. Q. Then four feet more after he hit it? A. After the car was hitted. There was a skid mark the other way. Q. How long have you driven automobiles? A. I have been driving for 22 years. Q. Have you driven passenger cars as well as trucks? A. I have driven passenger cars; I have driven trucks; and I have driven ambulances. Q. Are you able to give us an opinion as to how fast that bank truck, as you call it, was going just before it hit this automobile? A. Well, as close as I could imagine, that is in driving *349 experience, I would say lie was going at least 35 to 40 miles an hour. Q. Can you tell us about how fast Glee’s car was going eastward at that time? A. Well, you can’t go very fast after you stop. Q. Give us your opinion. A. I would say he was going at least 10 miles an hour. Q. At most how much? A. Well, at most he could do, would be 15 miles an hour in first gear.” On cross-examination the witness said: “When I first took a notice to a car, the truck coming north on Park Avenue I would say he was about 85 feet from the crossing.”

Norman Miller, another witness called by plaintiff, testified he was riding north on Park Avenue on his bicycle when appellant’s truck caught up with and passed him. When asked about the speed of the truck his reply was, “I would say over 35. I can’t tell if it was more. I know it was going 35 [miles per hour] because I go pretty fast on my bike.”

Plaintiff’s version of the accident reads: “Then you came to the west side of Park Avenue, now go ahead. A. I come up there, and I looked to — I slowed down, I looked to my right and I didn’t see anything coming. Q. How far could you see down Park Avenue to your right at that time? A. About one hundred feet down Park Avenue.......Q. To what speed did you slow down before you took that look? A. I slowed down, I throwed out of gear, looked to my right and then after 1 turned from my right I looked to my left, and I put it in second gear. I didn’t see nothing coming. I started on across the street. I just started to look to my right again and this here truck was right on top of me, just ready to strike me. Q. How far would you say the truck was away from you when you say he was almost on top of you? A. Oh, about just a couple feet, because I only had time to throw my right hand up in front of my head to protect my head. Q. How far was the rear end of your car across Park Avenue when the collision took place? A. The rear end was pretty near three-quarters *350 away across the street. Q. How close to the car’s [truck’s?] east side was the front end of your car when the collision happened? A. Only a couple of feet. Q. How much is the overall length of your car? In other words, how long is your car from the front bumper to the back bumper? A. About eleven or twelve foot. Q. What part of your car was struck? A. The right side, mostly towards the back.......Q. How fast were you going across Park Avenue? A. I was only in low gear. I will say about ten or twelve miles an hour in low gear. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 387, 135 Pa. Super. 345, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clee-v-brinks-inc-pasuperct-1938.