Francis v. Henry

160 A.2d 455, 399 Pa. 369, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 1960
DocketAppeal, 34
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 A.2d 455 (Francis v. Henry) 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
Francis v. Henry, 160 A.2d 455, 399 Pa. 369, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 463 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion bt

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

For many years Route 119, between Connellsville and Uniontown, consisted of a two-lane highway, divided down the middle to separate the northbound from the southbound traffic, but in 1956 the Department of Plighways constructed between these two cities a parallel road to be used exclusively for the northbound traffic, while the old highway was to be confined to southbound traffic.

On September 15, 1956, Connellsville was to have a civic celebration of some kind and, in order to accommodate the expected increased traffic due to the celebration, the Highways Department decided to open the new thoroughfare on the preceding day. Accordingly, on September 14, 1956, road crews, under the direction of the district traffic engineer of the department, removed the barricades which had sealed the new road from motorists during its construction. At the same time they put up, at the southern terminus of the highway, signs and arrows directing northbound motorists to the newly built road and they posted, at the various entrances to the old road, signs warning *371 motorists not to enter. The same procedure, (with opposing directions, of course), was followed at the northern terminus of the highway.

The enjoyment of the improved and increased highway facilities was considerably marred on the very first day of their use by a fatal accident. A Mrs. O. Katherine Henry, traveling northwardly to Connellsville in a Ford station wagon, ignored the newly built road and took up the old road (now reserved for southbound traffic only). At a point about one-half mile before Connellsville, her car collided with a Mercury automobile being driven southwardly on that same road by John E. Francis. The violence of impact was such that both were killed outrightly. The administrator of the estate of John E. Francis brought a wrongful and death survival action against the administrator of the estate of Mrs. Henry. *

At the ensuing trial the court nonsuited the plaintiff, and this appeal followed.

We do not believe that the nonsuit was in order. In the case of Ehrlich v. U. S. Fid. & Guar. Co., 356 Pa. 417 (1947), we quoted with approval what was said in Virgilio v. Walker and Brehm, 254 Pa. 241, 244-245, namely: “A nonsuit can be entered . . . when it is inconceivable, on any reasonable hypothesis, that a mind desiring solely to reach a just and proper conclusion in accordance with the relevant governing principles of law, after viewing the evidence in the light most advantageous to the plaintiff, could determine in his favor the controlling issues involved.”

Thus, the entering of a nonsuit is one of the most drastic procedures accomplished in a courthouse and should not be invoked unless the plaintiff’s case is so *372 obviously opposed to relevant principles of law, reason, natural law and the immutable sequence of cause and effect that it would be folly to consume time deliberating on it. Only a case destitute of the slightest merit in law can be brought to such an abrupt end. Of course, there are such cases, and the broom of nonsuit is well used to sweep them out of the courtroom needed for the many cases having ostensible merit, but the record does not disclose that this case was one for the broom.

The trial court, affirmed by a court en banc, came to the conclusion that the plaintiff failed to prove that the actions of Mrs. Henry constituted negligence. It concluded also that John Francis was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

Although the trial judge sat without a jury, his decision is required to be based on legal reasoning and not on factual determination because a nonsuit does not encompass the contrasting weighing of the evidence presented by the opposing parties. In view of this incontestable premise, it is difficult to comprehend how and why the court entered a nonsuit, since the evidence presented on the plaintiffs side does not speak in a soft voice of negligence on the part of the defendant’s decedent.

There can be little doubt that the new road between Uniontown and Connellsville was officially in use on September 15, 1956, the date of the accident, even though the Department of Highways did not formally take it over from the contractor for maintenance until November 15, 1956. Although the court below mildly questions that the motoring public was committed to using the new highway for northbound traffic on September 15th, it is highly significant that on that day the only two eyewitnesses to the Francis-Henry accident were actually on the new highway proceeding northwardly to Connellsville. Nor can it be ignored *373 that officials and employees of the Department of Highways testified that the new road was open to the public on September 15th, and that signs, adequately informing the public with regard to the use of the two roads, were conspicuously posted. Formal records of the Department further documented the fact that on September 14th signs were erected and barriers removed so that all southbound traffic would move on the old road and all northbound traffic would take the new road.

If, therefore, the old roadway was, on September 15th, committed to southbound traffic exclusively, it is obvious that Mrs. Henry, motoring northwardly to Connellsville on that road, was traveling on a road where she had no right to be. In a word, she was traveling in a direction opposite to the direction allowed by law. This strange event should have been enough to give the trial court pause as to whether her conduct did not, in itself, prima faciedly constitute negligence. That conduct, however, did not seem to impress the court at all. In its opinion, it said: “There was no proof of negligence on the part of Mrs. Henry except that she was going north in the southbound lane.”

It would be rather difficult to find in the lawbooks a clearer first view case of negligence than the situation of one traveling north on a road where he should be traveling south. In the case of Hankey Baking Co. v. Nat. Bread Co., 136 Pa. Superior Ct. 23, the plaintiff’s driver was struck by the defendant’s truck on the plaintiff’s side of the road. In affirming the judgment for the plaintiff entered in the trial court, the Superior Court said: “This was not an intersection case, and no question as to right of way was involved. Each driver was required to keep on his own side of the road ... If defendant’s driver had stayed on his own side of the road he Avould not have run into plain *374 tiff’s truck. The case is too clear to require further discussion.”

In Miles v. Myers, 353 Pa. 316, we cited the Hankey Baking case with approval. In the Miles case the plaintiff charged that her injuries were due to the fact that the defendant’s car was being operated on the wrong side of the highway. The trial court granted binding instructions for the defendant on the premise that the plaintiff had failed to make out a case of negligence. This Court reversed, Chief Justice Maxby saying: “It has been held that the fact that an automobile is on the wrong side of the highway makes out a prima facie case of negligence. See Amey v.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A.2d 455, 399 Pa. 369, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-v-henry-pa-1960.