Kline v. Moyer and Albert

191 A. 43, 325 Pa. 357, 111 A.L.R. 406, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1937
DocketAppeals, 73 and 74
StatusPublished
Cited by140 cases

This text of 191 A. 43 (Kline v. Moyer and Albert) 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
Kline v. Moyer and Albert, 191 A. 43, 325 Pa. 357, 111 A.L.R. 406, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 374 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

On a clear day in January, 1935, defendant Albert was driving his truck on the Philadelphia pike to Reading. At about 3:15 P. M., when five or six miles from his destination, the rear axle broke. At that point the road is straight for a considerable distance; it is a concrete highway twenty feet wide, with 8 to 12 foot berms. Albert, being alone on the truck, went to Reading to seek aid, leaving the truck standing where it had stopped on the easterly side of the road, with all four wheels on the concrete. At about 5: 50 P. M., it having become dusk, a car in which minor plaintiff was a guest rider came down the pike from Reading and as it started to pass the standing truck another automobile, driven by defendant Moyer and going in the direction of Reading, *359 swerved from the rear of the truck into the opposite lane of travel and struck plaintiffs’ car in what was practically a head-on collision. There was testimony that the Moyer car had been traveling at more than 45 miles an hour, that it did not slacken its speed, and that it turned to its left at a distance variously estimated at 35 to 60 feet from the rear of the truck. The present suit was brought against both Moyer and Albert to recover for damages sustained by plaintiffs. The negligence charged against Moyer was his failing to observe the truck, his approaching it at such a rate of speed that he was unable to stop in time to avoid the collision, and his driving to the left side of the road without previously observing whether there' was an on-coming car. The charge against Albert was that he permitted his truck to stand on the traveled part of the highway unguarded and insufficiently lighted. The jury rendered a verdict against both defendants. Each of them moved for a new trial, and defendant Albert also for judgment n. o. v. Moyer’s rule for a new trial was discharged, but the court granted Albert’s motion for judgment n. o. v., and the present appeal is by plaintiffs from that ruling.

While there is some contention on the part of Albert that the testimony as to the absence of a red light was merely negative and should not have been submitted to the jury in view of positive evidence that the tail light was lit, there was also testimony that, if there was such a light, it was obscured by the position of the tailboard; therefore it was for the jury to determine whether the requirements of the law were sufficiently met.

Assuming, then, that the verdict of the jury conclusively established the fact of Albert’s negligence, the important and, indeed, the only question on the present appeal is whether such negligence was, in whole or in part, a proximate cause of the accident, or whether, on the contrary, it was legally insulated by intervening negligence on the part of Moyer, reducing Albert’s negligence to the status of a remote cause, and thereby ab *360 solving him from liability. The court below sustained the latter view, and held that the case was ruled by Stone v. Philadelphia, 302 Pa. 340, and Hoffman v. McKeesport, 303 Pa. 548.

In the Stone case the City of Philadelphia had negligently allowed a hole to remain in a street. One Leven drove his automobile into the depression, lost control of the car, and violently struck plaintiff, a bystander. Leven knew of the existence of the hole, having for a long period of time frequently driven over that portion of the roadway. It was held that there could be recovery only against Leven, and not against the City, because its negligence was not the proximate cause of the accident. The court said (pp. 345-6) : “If Leven had not known of the hole and unwittingly had driven into it, there might arise a different legal liability situation, but he knew of it, and directly produced the injuries to plaintiff by his lack of care in not avoiding it. The defect in the street was passive so far as plaintiff was concerned. Without the independent act of Leven no harm would have come to him from it.”

In the Hoffman case, the City of McKeesport was negligent in having constructed a trench in the highway and allowing the refill to remain without paving for several weeks so that it developed a deep depression. A truck ran into it and swerved against a passing car in which plaintiff was a passenger, causing him injury. The court held that the City was not liable because its negligence was only a remote and not an efficient factor. The truck driver testified that he was aware of the defect and “knew it was dangerous,” that he passed over it several times each day, and, while doing so on a prior occasion, had damaged his truck.

In accord with these rulings is the decision in the recent case of Schwartz v. Jaffe, 324 Pa. 324. There the driver of an automobile, turning from a new highway onto an old road in process of reconstruction, encountered a depression in the roadbed. The impact caused *361 him to lose control of his car, which overturned, injuring plaintiff, a passenger in the automobile. Action being brought jointly against the driver and a construction company which was excavating the road, the court held that, even conceding the work of the construction company to have been negligently done, the depression in the highway was not the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, but the effective and active cause was the negligence of the operator of the car. The court said (p. 332) : “It is well settled that where there has been negligence in the doing of an act, the result of which is the creation of a dangerous condition, no liability will attach to the one responsible for the condition if an injury results which was not caused directly by this act, but rather by the intervening negligent conduct of a third party.” Here again the evidence indicated that the driver of the automobile was familiar with the road, having traveled over it on numerous occasions; he knew construction work was going on and that there was a consequent likelihood of defects in the highway.

It is argued by defendant Albert that there is no difference from a legal standpoint between a defect in the roadbed and an unlighted truck standing on the highway at night, each constituting a static factor which becomes a mere background of the accident when some superseding act of negligence on the part of a third person occurs.

In apparent contrast with these authorities plaintiffs present, as the basis of their legal contention, a series of cases which do not seem to have been considered by the court below.

In Hughes v. Pittsburgh Transportation Co., 300 Pa. 55, a taxicab was brought by its driver to a stop in such a position that part of it projected across a street railway track. A trolley car, through the negligence of its motorman, collided with the cab. To recover damages for the injury thereby occasioned to a passenger in the cab, suit was brought against both the taxicab company *362 and the street railway company. The cab company contended that its negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury, but the court said (p. 60) : . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 A. 43, 325 Pa. 357, 111 A.L.R. 406, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-moyer-and-albert-pa-1937.