Cook v. Philadelphia Transportation Co.

199 A.2d 446, 414 Pa. 154, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1964
DocketAppeal, 122
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 199 A.2d 446 (Cook v. Philadelphia Transportation Co.) 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
Cook v. Philadelphia Transportation Co., 199 A.2d 446, 414 Pa. 154, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 536 (Pa. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

The litigation in this case revolves around an unfortunate but more or less conventional motor vehicle accident. The appeal, however, has an unusual feature in that the error most urged by the appellant, has to do, not with the manner in which the accident oc *156 curred, but is directed toward tbe phraseology employed in describing a liquor-dispensing establishment known as the “Crazy Bar.”

The plaintiff, Mrs.. Rosa Lee Cook, testified that in the early morning (about 1:30 or 2 o’clock) of December 6, 1958, she was struck by a bus belonging to the defendant, Philadelphia Transportation Company, as she was crossing 52nd Street in Philadelphia at its intersection with Lancaster Avenue. The defendant produced a witness, Mrs. Florence Devlin, who testified that Mrs. Cook started across 52nd Street at a point some 90 feet south of Lancaster, that is to say she crossed-in the middle of a block. The point 90 feet south of Lancaster is on a line directly opposite an exit from the place known as the “Crazy Bar.” The trial judge ruled, upon due representation by plaintiff’s counsel, that during the trial the witnesses and lawyers could not use the name “Crazy Bar,” because this might create a prejudice in the minds of the jury, suggesting on the part of the plaintiff an inebriacy or excessive use of intoxicants of which there was no evidence whatsoever.

About three hours before the accident Mrs. Cook consumed a glass or two of beer at the home of a Mrs. Sanders. Later, she, Mrs. Sanders and a Mrs. Moseley went out looking for a Mrs. Alice Brown. They were informed that Mrs. Brown might have gone to a building “somewhere near the southeast corner of 52nd and Lancaster”. Mrs. Cook went into this building, asked for Mrs. Brown and, not finding her, left. She remained In this building for not more than five or ten minutes, >nd while there drank no beverage. As she came out Df the' building on the Lancaster side, she started across 52nd Street.

Defendant’s counsel cross-examined Mrs. Cook at length on all phases of the accident. In addition to Mrs. Devlin, whose testimony, as indicated, was to the *157 effect that Mrs. Cook crossed in the middle of a block, the defendant called a police officer who testified that when he appeared on the scene minutes after the accident, he found the body of the plaintiff lying in the street in front of the defendant’s bus at a point 90 feet south of Lancaster Avenue. The bus operator testified that the plaintiff ran out in front of his bus south of Lancaster Avenue. The exact point of the crossing was, of course, a question of fact for the jury, which resolved it in favor of the plaintiff and returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.

The defendant Was allowed the utmost latitude in developing its case and in no way was prevented from presenting all evidence it deemed helpful to its defense, nor was its counsel impeded in any manner in his cross-examination of the plaintiff and her witnesses.

Geographically, narratively, and graphically the jury got a complete picture of how the accident happened. They even were aided in this picturization of the pivotal event by a blackboard sketch of the scene of the accident, to which reference was made during the trial as to the places, persons, vehicles and different locations participating in the unfolding of the story of the collision between the bus and the plaintiff.

Whether the plaintiff came out of a Five-and-ten cent store before she crossed the street or a place called the “Crazy Bar” had absolutely nothing to do with the manner in which she received her injuries. The vital evidence as to how the accident occurred did not take hold until Mrs. Cook left the curb of 52nd Street to negotiate its crossing. Defendant’s counsel complains that he should have been allowed to bring out that the plaintiff emerged from a place with the notorious name of “Crazy Bar” before she committed herself to 52nd Street. To begin with, she denied that she came out of that place at that time but even if she had, there was not an iota of evidence that, being in the taproom, *158 had in any way incapacitated her from carefully, prudently and soberly crossing the street.

It is impossible to see how the defendant’s case— legally, morally, fairly and justly — would have been improved by witnesses referring to the building 90 feet south of Lancaster Avenue as the “Crazy Bar.” On the other hand, it is obvious that the plaintiff could have been irreparably prejudiced by testimony that she came out of a place called the “Crazy Bar,” especially in view of the fact that the accident occurred about 2 a.m., the bewitching hour many people are willing to believe can be an intoxicating hour when associated with a nocturnal drinking establishment. Had there been any evidence of intoxication or copious drinking on the part of Mrs. Cook, or that she had staggered or that there was liquor on her breath, there might be some logical support to the defendant’s insistence that it should have been allowed to call the establishment by its wild cognomen the “Crazy Bar.” But, the record is bone dry of any such evidence. Thus, the “Crazy Bar” was wholly alien to the accident, in no way contributed to the happening or an explanation of the accident, and the only possible advantage the defendant could have obtained by filling the jury’s ears with the cry of “Crazy Bar,” would have been an advantage it was not only not entitled to, but which might well have brought about a mistrial.

This Court has said in language that cannot be mistaken that unless there is evidence of excessive alcoholic consumption in a case such as this, it is error to dwell on “drinking.”

In Critzer v. Donovan, 289 Pa. 381, Chief Justice Kephart said: “Certainly if the driver was not intoxicated or driving while under the influence of liquor, the fact that he may have taken a drink has no bearing on the question of his negligence. Such testimony directly tends to raise in the minds of the jurors another *159 issue, — whether he was intoxicated, — which, in the absence of other evidence, should not have entered into the determination of the case. Moreover, this question was of such nature as to create an unfair prejudice against the driver and the owner.”

In Fisher v. Dye, 386 Pa. 141, this Court said: “While proof of intoxication is relevant where reckless or careless driving of an automobile is the matter at issue, the mere fact of drinking intoxicating liquor is not admissible, being unfairly prejudicial, unless it reasonably establishes a degree of intoxication which proves unfitness to drive.”

In Wentworth v. Doliner, 399 Pa. 356, we said: “The word ‘drinking,’ where alcohol is involved, carries the inevitable connotation of considerable drinking. Certainly, no one familiar with the idioms of current language would say of a person, who had consumed a single glass of beer, that he had been ‘drinking’.

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Bluebook (online)
199 A.2d 446, 414 Pa. 154, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-philadelphia-transportation-co-pa-1964.