Giles v. Bennett

148 A. 90, 298 Pa. 158, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 586
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 1929
DocketAppeal, 149
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 148 A. 90 (Giles v. Bennett) 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
Giles v. Bennett, 148 A. 90, 298 Pa. 158, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 586 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

This action was originally brought by plaintiff against Joseph Bennett and William F. Ryan to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband as a result of being struck by a truck owned by Ryan and driven by Bennett. At the trial a nonsuit was taken as to Bennett and the case proceeded against Ryan. A verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff. Judgment was subsequently entered for defendant non obstante veredicto and this appeal followed.

The accident occurred on Second Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh, which is a main thoroughfare running east and west. Deceased was employed at a manufacturing plant situated along the south side of that avenue. There is a double track street car line on the street and opposite the entrance to the mill is a regular stopping place for trolley cars. Deceased was a passenger on a westbound car running on the north track headed toward the business part of the city. The car stopped opposite the entrance to the mill at which deceased .was employed, which is the customary place, and deceased alighted and immediately proceeded to pass around in front of the car to cross the street. Both parties concede this was the proper place to cross and was regularly used for that purpose by employees of the mill. The testimony on behalf of plaintiff is that, after deceased passed the front of the car he crossed the space between the east- and westbound tracks, referred to as the “dummy,” and as he stepped on the eastbound trolley track, was struck by defendant’s truck which was running westward and in the act of passing on the left side of the trolley car. A bystander seeing the truck approaching shouted a warning to deceased and the latter immediately jumped or took a step forward in an apparent endeavor to reach the opposite side of the *161 street and avoid the truck; his effort however to prevent the contact was unsuccessful. There is evidence from which the jury could- infer that the truck was running at a high rate of speed and without adequate warning of its approach; accordingly the question of negligence on the part of the driver was properly for the jury and need not he considered here. The sole question is whether deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look for approaching vehicles before attempting to cross the street.

There was no statute er rule pf law in existence at the time this accident happened forbidding drivers of vehicles passing to the left of standing trolley cars. It also appears from the testimony that at the point where the accident occurred there was a space not exceeding seven or eight feet clearance between the wall on the north side of the street and the overhang of trolley cars passing along the north- or westbound track, and that because of this narrow space it was the general custom of drivers of vehicles to pass to the left instead of the right of westbound cars. While this fact would have hearing mainly on the question of negligence of the driver of the truck, it is also material under the circumstances here involved on the question of contributory negligence of deceased as affecting his duty to look for the approach of vehicles from the east after having passed around in front of the standing trolley and before starting to cross to the sidewalk. Several of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that deceased, after passing in front of the trolley car, looked to the right or westward. In absence of evidence to the contrary it must he presumed he performed his full duty to take due precaution for his own safety and looked also to the left. The court below, in entering judgment for defendant non obstante veredicto, held in effect that the evidence was sufficient to rebut the presumption of due care and to justify the court in saying as matter of law that deceased failed to look to the left before entering on the *162 track. The correctness of this conclusion depends upon whether the evidence of the witnesses as to the actions of deceased covered the entire period of time which elapsed from the moment he stepped from in front of the trolley car to the time he was struck. One of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that when he saw deceased start to cross the street in the direction of the witness, deceased was looking “down the street towards the city,” and on seeing the truck approach, the witness called to deceased to “look out,” whereupon the latter “kind of made a jump out of the road” and that “it all happened in an instant.” The witness stated that at the time deceased jumped he was “about in front of the truck.” This witness did not say how long he observed deceased, but he testified that when he heard the noise of the approaching truck he looked and saw deceased crossing the street, at which time, as stated above, the latter was “looking down the street towards the city.” He also stated that when he first saw deceased the latter had at the time passed the left line of the street car. Another witness testified that deceased “got off the front end and walked around the front end of the street car and looked in towards the city and just kept walking on to cross the street” when “all at once the truck came along and hit the man.” He was not asked and did not state whether or not deceased also looked to the left. A third witness, the motorman of the trolley car, called on behalf of plaintiff, testified deceased got off the right side of the trolley, walked around in front of the car and passed over the track, the examination further proceeding. : “Q. As he walked across in front of your car and on across to where he was hit, did you notice him,— whether he looked in either direction? A. He looked west. Q. You don’t know whether he looked east or not? A. No, I didn’t, I saw him glancing toward the city.” On cross-examination this witness further testified, in answer to a question as to where deceased was when he saw him: “He was on the first rail. Q. That *163 is when he was looking west? A. Yes, sir. Q. And he didn’t look east? A. No.” This testimony, it will be observed, is self-contradictory on the question whether or not deceased looked eastward. The doubt as to exactly what he observed is further increased by the fact that he stated in another part of his testimony that “when I turned around he was already struck. Q. He had been struck? A. No, when I glanced around I saw him being struck after that yell. Q. Was that when he was in the dummy? A. Yes, sir.”

The foregoing testimony, all of which came from plaintiff’s own witnesses, does not fully account for the actions of deceased from the time he passed in front of the standing trolley until he reached the middle of the adjoining eastbound track on which he was struck by defendant’s truck, so as to justify the legal conclusion that the presumption of due care was rebutted: Patterson v. Ry., 210 Pa. 47, 49; Hanna v. Ry., 213 Pa. 157, 160. In both of the above cases the evidence failed to account for the actions of deceased during the entire time as he approached the railroad tracks, and it was held to be for the jury to say whether the presumption was rebutted. A question of sufficiency of evidence to rebut the presumption of due care, appears in Hartig v. American Ice Co., 290 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 A. 90, 298 Pa. 158, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-bennett-pa-1929.