Kelly v. Crawford

8 A.2d 449, 137 Pa. Super. 197, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 29
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 26, 1939
DocketAppeal, 223
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 449 (Kelly v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Crawford, 8 A.2d 449, 137 Pa. Super. 197, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 29 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal is by the plaintiff from a judgment upon a verdict for the defendant in a negligence case.

The suit was brought to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff when a Chrysler Sedan, driven by defendant, overtook and ran into the left rear portion of a tractor street sweeper plaintiff was operating in the right hand lane of the southbound tube of the Liberty Tubes in the City of Pittsburgh. At the time of the accident both vehicles were proceeding in the same direction.

Although the assignments relate solely to alleged *199 errors in the charge and the refusal of a new trial, a brief review of the testimony is essential to an understanding of the questions here involved.

The accident happened about 6 o’clock a. m. on the morning of January T, 1938. The southbound tube, designed to carry two lanes of traffic moving in the same direction, extends from Pittsburgh towards Dormont; it is twenty-one feet wide, with a white line dividing the parallel traffic lanes.

Plaintiff testified he was operating the sweeper southwardly in the right lane and going with traffic. The tractor sweeper nine feet wide and bearing “Tractor License No. 2892,” was owned by the County of Allegheny. It was a “tractor type vehicle,” steered from the rear, and equipped with six electric lights on the front and five red lights and two red reflectors in the rear. According to plaintiff, all the lights on the sweeper were burning at the time of the collision; in addition, the tube lights were operating and there was no fog in the tube.

When plaintiff was about halfway through the tube, operating the sweeper at about six miles per hour, the car driven by defendant approached from the rear in the same lane of travel and at a speed of from thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. Its right front struck the left rear of the sweeper, throwing plaintiff off the driver’s seat and causing injuries to his leg, back and neck.

Defendant and his witnesses did not controvert the essential facts as to the manner in which the accident occurred. He testified, however, and was corroborated by motorists passing upon the left-hand lane, that there were no lights on the sweeper; that the atmosphere in the tube was heavy, misty and foggy; and that the artificial lighting provided by the county was extremely poor.

This conflicting testimony raised issues of fact, as to defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s alleged con- *200 tributary negligence, which it became the duty of the trial judge to submit to the jury under proper instructions relative to the law applicable thereto.

Appellant’s assignments are based upon two consecutive portions of the charge; the first reads: “Now under the automobile laws we have other things; we have a law in the State of Pennsylvania which says that anybody who uses a headlight should use such a light under the circumstances that would throw a beam of light one hundred feet, so he could see ahead one hundred feet. Then, we have another law which pertains to rear lights, that they should show a light that you could see for five hundred feet.”

Section 801 of Article VIII of the Motor Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905, as variously amended, including the amendment of June 29, 1937, P. L. 2329, (75 PS §351)' provides in' paragraph (d) : “Every motor vehicle, and every trailer or semi-trailer attached to a motor vehicle, and every vehicle which is being drawn at the end of a combination of vehicles, shall carry at the rear a lamp of a type which at the time of its use is approved by the secretary, and which exhibits a red light, plainly visible under normal atmospheric conditions from a distance of five hundred (500) feet to the rear of such vehicle......” (Italics supplied).

Appellant complains, and we think justly, that the positive instruction thát the law required him to have a rear light upon the sweeper that could be seen from a distance of five hundred feet, without, in immediate connection therewith, giving him the benefit of the qualifying statutory phrase, “under normal atmospheric conditions,” placed an unwarranted and unduly heavy burden upon him and had a strong tendency to mislead the jury upon the question of appellant’s asserted contributory negligence; The attention of the jury was not even directed to the fact that the evidence with relation to the atmospheric conditions previaling at the time of the accident was conflicting.

*201 We need not decide whether the above instruction, covered by the first assignment, would, in the absence of a specific exception to it, constitute such basic and fundamental error as to require a new trial if it stood alone. That statement was followed by instructions which were even more prejudicial to appellant upon the question of his alleged contributory negligence. The trial judge proceeded: “And if the light is out of order or anything else, just as Mr. Chilcote (attorney for defendant) has told you, they must go out on the highway and put on a flare; that is for the protection of the people using the highway, who are following, that is either trucks or automobiles. Now if you find that this plaintiff was using due care in operating his sweeper, and he did everything under the automobile law, under the road law, then you will come to the other proposition, whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence.” (Italics supplied)

Section 824 of the above cited Article of the Vehicle Code, 75 PS §432, deals with the types of vehicles required to carry red flares and prescribes the circumstances under which they shall be used. It provides in part as follows: “(a) Every motor bus and every motor omnibus for the carriage of passengers for hire, except taxicabs, and every commercial vehicle, or combination of vehicles, having a gross weight of eleven thousand (11,000) pounds, or more, and every trailer, or semitrailer designed for the living quarters or carriage of persons, shall be equipped with at least three (3) red flags, of dimensions not less than twelve by twelve (12 x 12) inches, and a sufficient number of flares, not less than three (3), or electric lanterns, electric flashing signals, or other signals capable of continuously producing three warning lights, each visible from a distance of at least five hundred (500) feet for a period of at least eight (8) hours.......(b) Whenever any such vehicle and its lighting equipment are disabled, during the period when lighted lamps must be displayed *202 on vehicles, and such vehicle cannot immediately be removed from the main traveled portion of a highway outside of a business or residence district, or if the lighting equipment

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 449, 137 Pa. Super. 197, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-crawford-pasuperct-1939.