Hohman Et Ux. v. Sadsbury Township

31 A.2d 711, 347 Pa. 122, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 25, 1943
DocketAppeals, 270 and 271
StatusPublished

This text of 31 A.2d 711 (Hohman Et Ux. v. Sadsbury Township) 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
Hohman Et Ux. v. Sadsbury Township, 31 A.2d 711, 347 Pa. 122, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 406 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearns,

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, instituted this action against Sadsbury Township to recover damages for personal injuries and property damage sustained in an automobile accident. The accident occurred at 4:30 p. m. on June 6, 1937, on Route 18, a State Highway, during a heavy rain. The husband plaintiff was driving. Their car, traveling in a southerly direction, and proceeding, according to plaintiffs’ witnesses, at the speed of 25 miles per hour, crossed the intersection of Route 18 with Oakmont Drive, continued for a distance of 864 feet on a slight curve to the right, skidded and left the road. The vehicle passed over the berm and collided with a tree with such force, despite its moderate speed, that the front of the car was all but demolished and the wife plaintiff sustained .very severe injuries.

Although neither plaintiff offered any testimony as to the cause of the accident, the husband plaintiff testified that as he was assisting his wife to another vehicle after the collision he noticed that the surface of Route 18 was “oily”. Other witnesses called on behalf of plaintiffs stated that Oakmont Drive, a township road, had been oiled or resurfaced a few days before, and that oil had been carried by automobiles from the Drive to the State Highway. Their evidence was that the greatest *124 quantity of this substance was at the intersection of the two roads, but that some of it extended on the right side of the Highway for some distance south of the intersection. Their testimony as to this distance, and as to the quantity of the oil on the Highway varied. One witness testified that the Highway was “slippery from the oil” between Oakmont Drive and the next intersecting road. Another witness, having said that the Highway was “oily” between those points, admitted on cross-examination that she could not remember seeing oil on its surface beyond the intersection of Oakmont Drive. A third witness said that oil extended from that intersection to the next, but that it “thinned out the farther you got away from there”. A fourth said that the oil extended for 100 feet to the south of Oakmont Drive. A State Highway Department employe testified that there was a “slight condition” of oil between the two intersections. None of the witnesses testified that there was oil on Route 18 at the point where plaintiffs’ car skidded.

The record does not indicate the date upon which the resurfacing of Oakmont Drive began. Apparently, in the fall of 1936, the township supervisors sponsored a Works Progress Administration project for the construction and draining of certain township roads, including Oakmont Drive. The .contract or agreement between the township and the WPA is not in evidence. The testimony establishes that WPA laborers, using tools and equipment supplied by the township, first graded the road and spread it with gravel. They worked under the supervision of a WPA foreman and were paid by the WPA. A coat of oil, or liquid asphalt, was then applied by employes of the Hull Resurfacing Company, which had entered into a contract with the township to oil and roll the Drive. The terms of the contract do not appear in the record, but the evidence indicates that the Company supplied the oil and the machines used in distributing it and rolling the surface. The first coat *125 was applied at some time between May 28, 1937, and June 1, 1937. Another layer of gravel was spread by the WPA workmen, and three days after the first coat of oil, a second coat was applied by the Company. This was also covered with gravel, and the road was rolled by an employe of the Company. There is no evidence that any officer or employe of the township exercised any direction or supervision of the work at any time. During the oiling of the Drive barricades were erected, but these were knocked down or opened by some motorists who used the road while the construction was in progress.

Plaintiffs, in their statement of claim, alleged that the township was negligent in that it permitted its “agents, servants and employees” to apply “huge and excessive” quantities of oil to the Drive, which they knew, or should have known, would be carried onto Route 18; that it permitted “the excessive oil” to remain on the Drive “for a long period of time before the accident”; that it failed to remove excessive oil from the Drive and from the State Highway; that it posted no signs at the intersection to warn motorists of the “dangerous condition” of Route 18. The township filed an affidavit of defense denying negligence and averring that the work was performed by the Hull Resurfacing Company. Defendants thereupon, by sci. fa., brought in the Company as an additional defendant.

At the trial, the only testimony offered by plaintiffs to show negligence in the construction of the road was supplied by an expert witness, W. H. Francies. He was asked an involved hypothetical question as to whether a construction, approximating the construction used in the present case, but employing no specific quantities or qualities of gravel, would be “reasonably safe”. He replied, over objection, that “it was not a proper method”. He was then asked if there was a recognized method of preventing oil from being carried to an adjacent highway from such a road. He replied in the affirmative, *126 and was then permitted to testify at length as to the quantity of oil, and the quantity and quality of gravel to be used. Upon cross-examination as to his knowledge of road-building methods, he testified “I was constructing a safe road. I am not sticking to standards; I was sticking to what I thought was a safe road.” The quantity of oil specified by the witness for his “safe” road was the same as that applied in the actual construction of the Drive and he admitted that he had no knowledge concerning the type or amount of gravel actually used. Asked how he had assumed that the construction of the Drive was improper without knowing the latter facts, or assuming them, he answered: “I wasn’t constructing that road. I was constructing one of my own, the safe road I would put in.”

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the wife plaintiff for $28,823.64, and in favor of the husband plaintiff for $452.50, against the defendant township, and found specially that there was “no negligence on the part of the Hull Resurfacing Company of Butler, Pa., additional defendant.” The township’s motions for a new trial and judgment n. o. v. were dismissed by the court en banc and judgment was entered- for plaintiffs on the verdict. This appeal followed.

A careful reading of the record in this case leads us inevitably to the conclusion that the township’s motion for judgment n. o. v. should have been granted. This conclusion rests upon two grounds: (1) that plaintiffs failed to prove negligence on the part of the township in the construction and maintenance of Oakmont Drive, and (2) that the work was performed by independent contractors for whose carelessness the township would, in any event, have had no liability.

Plaintiffs and the court beloAV have cited numerous decisions upon the duty of municipal authorities to construct and maintain their streets and highways in a safe condition for the use of the public. These decisions have no application to the present case. Plain *127

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Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 711, 347 Pa. 122, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hohman-et-ux-v-sadsbury-township-pa-1943.