Harris v. Philadelphia Facilities Management Corp.

106 A.3d 183, 2014 WL 6764051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 550
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 A.3d 183 (Harris v. Philadelphia Facilities Management Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Philadelphia Facilities Management Corp., 106 A.3d 183, 2014 WL 6764051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 550 (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge McCULLOUGH.

William Harris, Jr. (Appellant) appeals from the August 7, 2013 order of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas (trial court) denying Appellant’s post-trial motions for a new trial. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Philadelphia Facilities Management Corporation and Danella Companies, Inc. (Appellees) entered into a contract with Philadelphia Gas Works to work on a gas main located within the North Philadelphia campus of Temple University. Appellees excavated the intersection of Broad and Diamond Streets for the gas main work and created irregularities in the roadway when- the excavation at the intersection was temporarily patched. On August 14, [185]*1852010, Appellant was involved in a single-vehicle motorcycle accident at the intersection. He suffered injuries, the most severe of which were displaced and impacted fractures of his left tibia and fibula. Officer Julio Caserío (Officer Caserío) and Officer Matthew Hassel (Officer Hassel) of the Temple University police department responded to the accident.1 Officer Hassel prepared a police accident report2 but did not testify at trial.3 A jury trial was held from February 4, 2013, to February 12, 2013.

Appellant filed a motion in limine seeking to preclude portions of the police accident report prepared by Officer Hassel. In particular, Appellant sought the exclusion of Officer Hassel’s opinions regarding speeding, improper careless turning, driver inexperience, Appellant being distracted while driving, and other improper driving actions. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 340a, 342a, 352a.) During the trial, the trial court addressed Appellant’s motion, stating:

[Trial court]: [CJounsel makes reference to things in the police report that are observations by the officer such as the location of the accident, the time of the accident, things of that nature.
Generally speaking, police reports are inadmissible hearsay. You may make reference to some of those things.
In this case the issue of the pothole is the ultimate issue for the jury to decide. It would be unfair to allow any reference to the police report at all and [there] will be no reference to the police report at all.

(R.R. at 361a-62a) (emphasis added). Rather than excluding only the portions of the police accident report requested by Appellant, the trial court excluded all of Officer Hassel’s opinions as to the cause of the accident.

Appellant testified that he was riding his motorcycle at ten to fifteen miles per hour as he approached Broad Street to make a left turn when he ran over some bumps and lost control of the motorcycle, causing it to wobble and eventually fall in the middle of Broad Street. The motorcycle landed on Appellant’s leg, breaking it. Appellant stated that he did not slide under the motorcycle. He acknowledged that he did not see a trench in the road until after he was helped out of the middle of the street, but he was positive that the trench caused the accident. Appellant described the trench as one in a zigzag pattern that spanned the length of the crosswalk on Diamond Street. Appellant testified that it was obvious that he ran over something on his motorcycle, because both of his wheels went into the trench and he hit a number of potholes when inside of the trench. He noted that he had a 1-or 2-inch scratch on his left forearm as a result of the accident and stated that he went over the motorcycle instead of sliding. (R.R. at 384a-88a, 390a-91a, 393a-94a, 407a-08a, 426a, 454a-55a.).

John Posusney (Posusney), a civil structural engineer, testified as an expert witness for Appellant, stating that he could see the depression, i.e., the trench, in a photograph of the accident site admitted [186]*186into evidence. Posusney opined that the trench was the cause of the accident, but he acknowledged that the conclusions in his report were based solely on Appellant’s and Appellant’s sister’s descriptions of the potholes that were in the admitted photographs. (R.R. at 521a-22a, 5S4a, 545a.).

Officer Caserío testified that he and Officer Hassel responded to the accident. Officer Caserío said that, by the time they reached the accident scene, Appellant’s motorcycle was in the center of the intersection and Appellant was half sitting/half lying down off to the side. Officer Caserío stated that he investigated the intersection after Appellant told him that he hit a pothole. However, Officer Caserío did not see any severe potholes. He added that there was a minimal construction trench, if there was one at all, on Diamond Street. Officer Caserío testified that Officer Has-sel wrote the police accident report; Officer Caserío stated that he remembered the accident and that he reviewed the police accident report prior to testifying to check for any specific details that he might not have recalled. (R.R. at 778a-80a, 783a, 785a, 789a.).

William J. Martin (Martin), Appellees’ accident reconstruction expert, testified that he reviewed the. accident report; three photographs taken by Appellant’s sister the night of the accident; transcripts of the depositions of Appellant, Appellant’s sister, and Officer Caserío; Po-susne/s report; vehicle data regarding Appellant’s motorcycle type; aerial photographs from Google Earth; and United States Naval Observatory data concerning sunrise and sunset in Philadelphia. Martin concluded that the accident occurred slightly before 8:00 p.m., when there still would have been sunlight. Martin was familiar with the route and speed that Appellant alleged he was travelling at the time of the accident and the damage to Appellant’s motorcycle. Martin visited the intersection, took photographs, made measurements, and created a scaled aerial photograph of the accident scene. Martin opined that no potholes or breakouts in the road on Diamond Street would have affected the operation of the motorcycle. Martin testified that the trench was only slightly depressed and that the accident did not occur at the trench but beyond it. (R.R. at 810a-lla, 820a, 841a.).

Martin believed that Appellant was involved in a “low-side” accident, explaining that low-side accidents occur when the bottom of the motorcycle slides away from the operator. (R.R. at 832a.) He further described low-side accidents as follows:

[Appellees’ counsel]: What causes a low-side accident?
[Martin]: A low-side accident is caused by — can be caused by several factors; one being attempting to brake too hard with the rear wheel while leaning into a curb.
And what that can do is that can lock the wheel up and where it will, then, slide out from under you and cause you to go down.
It can be from hitting a slippery type surface, say an oil slick, with your rear wheel as you’re, again, leaning into a turn, where anything that’s going to break the friction between the rear wheel and the road and cause it to slide out from beneath you, that is a low-side. And that’s the only time that you will stay beneath the motorcycle.

(R.R. at 832a.) Martin’s ultimate opinion was that Appellant was involved in a low-side accident that could only have been caused by driver error. (R.R. at 842a, 875a, 888a-89a.)

In rebuttal, Appellant presented the testimony of Donald Thomas, Ph.D. (Dr. Thomas), an expert in biomechanics. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A.3d 183, 2014 WL 6764051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-philadelphia-facilities-management-corp-pacommwct-2014.