Kottler v. Asbestos Shingle, Slate & Sheathing Co.

6 Pa. D. & C. 525, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 262
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedSeptember 1, 1925
DocketNo. 1608
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C. 525 (Kottler v. Asbestos Shingle, Slate & Sheathing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kottler v. Asbestos Shingle, Slate & Sheathing Co., 6 Pa. D. & C. 525, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 262 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Gordon, Jr., J.,

This is a suit for damages for injuries which plaintiff claims he suffered in a collision, which occurred at the intersection of Waverly Road and the Conshohoeken State Road, in Montg-omery County, between the plaintiff's motorcycle and an automobile belonging to, and operated by an agent of, the defendant.

The jury rendered a verdict for the defendant and the plaintiff moves for a new trial. In support of his motion he assigns nine reasons. The first four are the usual formal reasons, that the verdict was against the law, the evidence, the weight of the evidence and the charge of the court. The fifth reason is merely a reservation of the right to file additional reasons after the filing of the official transcript of the notes of testimony and charge of the court. The sixth reason alleges error in the action of the trial judge in “refusing to allow plaintiff to exhibit in evidence at the trial the side-car referred to in the testimony.” The seventh, eighth and ninth reasons assign certain portions of the charge as error.

With respect to the first four reasons assigned for a new trial, we are satisfied with the verdict. The case presented clean-cut issues of fact which were decided by the jury in favor of the defendant, and we see no reason for holding that the verdict was against either the weight of the evidence, the law or the charge of the court. Indeed, it is difficult to see how the jury could have rendered a different verdict under the evidence. The plaintiff, traveling westwardly on the Waverly Road in Montgomery County, was approaching its [526]*526intersection with Conshohocken State Road, and the defendant’s automobile, traveling southwardly on the latter road, was approaching the same intersection. The ground lying between these two roads, in the angle formed by their lines of approach, sloped downward, so that one on the Waverly Road approaching the intersection could see traffic approaching along the State Road on his right for a distance of some 200 feet north of the intersection. A longer view is prevented by a curve in the State Road. Similarly, one traveling on the State Road within a distance of 200 feet from the intersection could see traffic approaching along the Waverly Road on his left for many hundred feet east of the intersection.

The plaintiff’s case was supported by his own testimony alone. His contention was that, due to the recent spreading of oil or tar upon the Waverly Road east of the intersection, he had reduced his speed to approximately six or seven miles an hour, and that he was traveling at this rate of speed when he reached the Conshohocken State Road. He contended that his view of the State Road to his right was obstructed by a Tarvia wagon which was standing on the near side of the State Road, a few feet north of the corner; that as he was crossing the State Road and had reached about to its centre, the defendant’s automobile suddenly approached from around a curve in the State Road, some 200 feet north of the intersection, traveling at a very high speed, which he estimated to be from forty-five to fifty miles an hour; that, although he endeavored, by putting on speed himself, to get across the intersection in safety, he was unable to do so because of the speed of the defendant’s car, which bore down upon him, struck the side-car of his motorcycle and drove it many feet down the Conshohocken State Road; and that the defendant’s car was traveling at such a speed that, after the collision, it ran up and stopped on top of a high bank at the far right-hand corner of the intersection.

The undisputed evidence in the case showed that the plaintiff was not thrown from his motorcycle, which was not overturned or so damaged as to prevent him from riding off on it shortly after the accident, and that he himself gave no immediate evidence of having suffered any serious injury. According to his own testimony, the plaintiff rode off on the motorcycle after the accident, left it at a farmhouse somewhere in the neighborhood and did not see it for some months thereafter. The personal injuries which he claims he suffered in the accident did not develop until the following day.

This is the version of the accident as testified to by the plaintiff. On the other side, the defendant called the driver of its automobile and five apparently disinterested witnesses, persons who, at the time of the accident, were engaged in and around the intersection in the work of spreading tar upon the Waverly Road. The evidence of these witnesses as a whole seriously contradicts the testimony of the plaintiff respecting the relative speeds of the automobile and motorcycle and the manner in which the accident happened. There was ample evidence to support a finding by the jury either that defendant’s automobile had not approached the intersection negligently or that, even if it did so, the accident was due to the failure of the plaintiff to obey his statutory duty to yield to the defendant’s automobile the right of way which the law gave it under the circumstances, it being upon the plaintiff’s right and approaching the comer at substantially the same time.

In addition to the conflicting testimony respecting the manner in which the accident happened, which it was the province of the jury to resolve, we are satisfied, from the standpoint of the credibility of the witnesses, their interest or want of interest in the proceedings, and from the probabilities of their testimony, that the weight of evidence lies clearly with the defendant. We [527]*527see no reason, therefore, for disturbing the verdict for any of the first four reasons assigned for the new trial.

The sixth reason upon which a new trial is asked alleges that the trial judge erred “in refusing to allow plaintiff to exhibit in evidence at the trial the side-car referred to in the testimony.” The only references to it by counsel appear on pages 3 and 53 of the notes of testimony. On page 3 appears the following:

“Mr. MacFarland: If your Honor please, I have that side-car out here in another room. Would your Honor allow me to have that brought in? The Court: If it becomes necessary, you can, but there is no use of bringing it in now.”

And on page 53, in an interruption in the cross-examination, appears the following:

“Mr. MacFarland: If the Court pleases, may I not have that side-car brought in? The Court: Let him go on with the cross-examination.”

The sixth reason might be dismissed with the observation that neither of these colloquies amounts to an offer of the side-car in evidence, and, of course, unless offered, it could not have been exhibited to the jury. However, in view of the conflicting testimony of the plaintiff, who, in one part of his evidence, described the condition of the motorcycle as, “it is all bent and twisted and broken, and the motorcycle, as far as it goes, it is an entire loss to me altogether,” and in other parts admitted that he had operated it after the accident, and that for some months it had been permitted to be idle on a farm in Montgomery County, coupled with his failure to prove that the entire machine was in the same condition at the time of the trial as it was immediately after the accident, the trial judge would have been compelled to exclude the evidence had it been offered. In addition, the plaintiff did not seek to exhibit the motorcycle to the jury, but only its side-car. It was his duty to exhibit the whole machine or not offer it at all, for its only value as a piece of evidence lay in the nature and extent of all the injuries it received in the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C. 525, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kottler-v-asbestos-shingle-slate-sheathing-co-pactcomplphilad-1925.