Hendricks v. Pyramid Motor Freight Corp.

195 A. 907, 328 Pa. 570, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 457
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1937
DocketAppeals, 296 and 302
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 195 A. 907 (Hendricks v. Pyramid Motor Freight Corp.) 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
Hendricks v. Pyramid Motor Freight Corp., 195 A. 907, 328 Pa. 570, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 457 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

These appeals, No. 296 by Delaware River Ferry Company, and No. 302, by Pyramid Motor Freight Corporation, are from judgments on a verdict, reduced from $20,000 to $15,000 in an action brought by the plaintiff on behalf of herself and children for the death of her husband. The Pyramid Corporation now concedes liability and complains only that the verdict was not reduced more. "We have considered the evidence in the light of the argument and all agree that there was no *572 abuse of discretion: Filer v. Filer, 301 Pa. 461, 152 A. 567. In No. 302, therefore, the judgment is affirmed.

A very different problem is presented by the Perry Company’s appeal, the assignments of error going to the refusal to grant its motion for judgment n. o. v. and to errors in the charge.

The Perry Company is a common carrier and at the time of the accident, operated a ferry boat between Philadelphia and Camden. Plaintiff’s husband, Hendricks, was employed by Horn and Hardart company as a truck driver. He drove a Ford truck on the boat at the Philadelphia terminal to be transported to Camden. His truck was the first in line and was stopped with brakes set and power off, four or five feet from the iron gate or barrier extending across the boat from one side to the other about fifteen feet from the bow. This barrier was divided into four gates, one across the wing decks at each side to keep back passengers from the forward deck, and two across the main deck, hinged on pillars at the edge of the wing decks, and meeting in the center of the main deck; steel cables, three-fourths of an inch thick, also extended along the gates from each of the pillars to the center of the main deck where they were united by a metal catch.

The next car in line behind Hendricks’s truck was a Dodge Sedan which stopped two or three feet behind the truck, also with brakes set and power off. The third and last vehicle in this line was the Pyramid Company’s combination tractor and trailer which stopped two or three feet behind the Dodge car. This combination tractor and trailer was thirty-three feet long and weighed ten tons empty. It was equipped with an air brake system, but, unfortunately, the driver had neglected to attach the air hose from the tractor to the trailer, so that there was no available brake for the trailer’s wheels in the emergency soon presenting itself. A rule of the Ferry Company required its deck hands (the boat carried the crew required by the Federal reg *573 illations) to place a block against a front wheel of the first and of the second cars in line. It is undisputed that such a block was in place in front of Hendricks’s truck, but the evidence is conflicting whether one was placed in front of the Dodge car. We must therefore now assume, in plaintiff’s favor, that the deck hands failed to comply with the rule and did not block the second car.

Warnings were posted prohibiting drivers from starting their motors before the boat was made fast; the Pyramid Company’s driver was familiar with them; a federal statute 1 likewise required that precaution. Before the boat reached the Camden landing bridge, the Pyramid Company’s driver, in violation of the regulations, started his motor, standing in front of the truck, by cranking. The boat was then about 50 feet from the landing bridge slowly drifting in within the piling defining the ferry slip. It is not contended that there was any failure in the mechanical operation of the boat or of the facilities of transportation. When the truck was cranked, it immediately started forward in gear, and, before the driver could stop it by getting into the driver’s place and applying such brakes as he had to the rear wheels of the tractor, his truck had run into the Dodge car and pushed it against Hendricks’s truck with such force that it went through the gates and the steel cable and off the bow into the water. The thing happened so quickly that Hendricks, who had been seated in the cab of his truck, was unable to get out and was drowned. It is not disputed that his truck went through the gates with such force that one of the gates, in opening, struck a deck hand and knocked him from the boat across the deck into the water. For the purposes of passing on the motion for judgment, we shall assume, though this also is disputed, that the steel cable was not properly fastened and that this was a breach of the Ferry Company’s *574 duty. Two such breaches of duty therefore are to be considered — failure to place a block in front of the Dodge car and failure to have a stronger cable, or more secure fastening where the two ends were united.

The measure of care to be exercised by a common carrier of passengers is familiar, and if, as here, the carrier transports the passenger’s truck, in a sense in the passenger’s care or custody, the carrier must furnish a boat equipped to enable that duty to be performed in conformity with the rule. Compare Sturgis v. Kountz, 165 Pa. 358, 30 A. 976. Assuming that from the conflicting evidence a properly instructed jury would find the Ferry Company negligent in failing to block the Dodge car and that the steel cable was improperly fastened or that the fastening broke when Hendricks’s car was forced against it by the Dodge car and Pyramid Company’s truck, the legal question still remains whether, in the circumstances, the law casts the legal responsibility for plaintiff’s loss on the Pyramid Company alone, or whether the negligence of the Ferry Company, in the respect indicated, can also be said to have been a substantial or legal cause.

The answer to this inquiry depends on whether the Pyramid Company’s driver’s conduct was so extraordinary as not to have been reasonably foreseeable, or whether it was reasonably to be anticipated. 2 We think that proper appreciation of the recklessness (Restatement, Torts, Yol. II, Section 500) of his act requires the court to say his conduct was so extraordinary as not to have been foreseeable and that accordingly the learned court below should have granted defendant’s motion for judgment. 3

*575 There is no evidence that the ferry boat was not constructed and equipped sufficiently to enable the Ferry Company to perform its contracts with its passengers; courts take judicial notice that frequent and regular inspection of such boats are required pursuant to federal regulations; indeed they were referred to in the evidence. There was no duty on the Ferry Company to inspect each ear as it came aboard to ascertain whether its brakes and other machinery were in good working order. There is no evidence that the Ferry Company knew that the brakes on the trailer were not connected with the tractor and would therefore not work if emergency required them.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 907, 328 Pa. 570, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-pyramid-motor-freight-corp-pa-1937.