KRYWUCKI v. Trommer

184 A.2d 389, 199 Pa. Super. 145, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 515
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 13, 1962
DocketAppeals, 144, 145, 146, and 147
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 A.2d 389 (KRYWUCKI v. Trommer) 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
KRYWUCKI v. Trommer, 184 A.2d 389, 199 Pa. Super. 145, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 515 (Pa. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Watkins, J.,

These are appeals of Karen Krywucld, a minor, by her natural guardian and parent, John Krywucld, and John Krywucld, in his own right, from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, in an automobile accident trespass case, entered on a verdict in favor of the minor plaintiff, in the amount of $1000, and in favor of her plaintiff-father, in the amount of $250, and against the defendant-appellee, Anthony Joseph Bocchino, Jr.; and from the denial by the Court below of their motion for a new trial. The verdict was in favor of Frederick Trommer, Jr., the other defendant-appellee.

The minor plaintiff was six years old at the time of the accident. She was injured when struck by a car driven by one of the defendants, Frederick Trommer, Jr. The accident happened on a warm, clear Sunday, May 6, 1957, at 7:00 p.m. It was still daylight. She was struck while crossing Bannockburn Avenue, in Ambler, Pennsylvania, on her way to a playground located on the south side of the avenue. She lived on the north side of the avenue in No. 255, one of the row of houses located there. The avenue is 29.6 feet wide and runs east and west. Cars are permitted to park on the north side of the avenue, and, at the time of the accident, were parked solidly along the north side curb.

Karen testified that she left her home at No. 255 and walked down to the pavement, and walked westwardly along the pavement to the location of No. 247 (this is a distance of 63 feet), where, she testified, she *149 walked out into the street between the parked cars and behind the double parked car of Bocchino; that she. looked both directions, saw nothing, started to cross the highway and was struck about two feet from the south curb.

The defendant Bocchino was proceeding eastwardly on the avenue and stopped to deliver a package at No. 247. In order to park, he crossed into the westbound traffic lane on the wrong side of the street, and double parked, facing east in front of No. 247. He went in to deliver the package and returned to his car in about ten minutes. He was parked about one foot from the parked car, and was about one and one-half feet over the center line. .

While Bocchino was in his car getting ready to continue in an eastwardly direction, the defendant Trommer was already proceeding on the avenue in a westwardly direction. As he passed Karen’s residence at No. 255 he observed her coming down the steps onto the pavement but did not see her thereafter until the accident. As Bocchino started to move his car he saw Trommer approaching, stopped, still facing east, and straddling the middle line of the street, permitted Trommer to cross over into the eastern traffic lane in order to pass him. At this point both cars were in wrong traffic lanes. Trommer’s car was in the east traffic lane only because of the location of the Bocchino car.

As Trommer passed the Bocchino car there was the sound of brakes and people shouting. Bocchino ran from his car and found Karen lying in the street about two feet from the curb. He had not seen her before the accident.

Trommer testified that he was traveling ten to fifteen miles per hour when he passed the Bocchino car when Karen appeared about eight feet in front of him; that he braked immediately but struck Karen a slight *150 blow. His testimony was that she “ran into me at an angle like” as he turned his car to avoid striking her. He had seen her come to the pavement at No. 255 but had not expected her to cross the street at a point opposite No. 247. The double parked cars obscured his vision to the west. There were skid marks of five and one-half feet made by the Trommer car. The left front wheel was three feet from the south curb line. There was disinterested testimony by neighbors that Karen ran from her home at No. 255 down the steps and west-war dly along the pavement to No. 247, then into the street without looking, and that Trommer was traveling slowly and stopped immediately.

Karen suffered two black eyes, lacerations and bruises and spent six days in the hospital. Thereafter, her parents testified they noticed Karen began drooling, falling, becoming dizzy, having headaches, being-restless and having poor coordination. The plaintiffs claimed that she suffered permanent brain damage as a result of the accident, and there was medical testimony to support this claim based on the history supplied by the parents. The defendants, through disinterested witnesses, neighbors, and her kindergarten teacher sought to prove that Karen always manifested the symptoms complained of and if she did suffer from brain damage it was congenital. The plaintiffs insist that Trommer was also negligent and that the verdict was grossly inadequate. Credibility was, of course, for the jury. The jury found “for defendant Frederick Trommer, Jr. For plaintiff, Karen Krywucki and against Anthony Joseph Bocchino, Jr., defendant— $1000. For plaintiff John Krywucki and against Anthony Joseph Bocchino, Jr., defendant—$250.”

The burden in this appeal is on the appellants to show the refusal of a new trial by the court below was an abuse of discretion, when the evidence is examined in the light most favorable to the appellees. We can *151 not agree with the contention of the appellants that the court below committed fundamental error in reading defendant’s point for charge involving the “dart out” principle as follows: “The defendant, Frederick Trommer, Jr., cannot be held responsible for the accident if he was driving his car at the time under proper control under the circumstances and Karen Krywucki suddenly darted across the street immediately in front of his car from behind two vehicles which hid her from his view. If you believe that is what happened here, then your verdict must be for the defendant, Frederick Trommer, Jr.”

He also charged: “Members of the jury, I charge you that since both defendants admitted seeing children in the immediate area, a great or high degree of care or caution was required of both operators for the protection of this child.

“Members of the jury, I charge you that it is not a defense to defendant, Trommer, that he could not anticipate that Karen would cross the street in the middle of the block. I charge, as a matter of law, that where a driver knows of the presence of a child, as Trommer here admits, he must anticipate such childish behavior and is charged with knowledge of childish conduct.

“Members of the jury, where an operator of a motor vehicle has reason to apprehend that children may run into a place of danger, he has a duty to have his car under such control that it can be stopped on the shortest possible notice of danger. In this connection, you will recall that defendant, Trommer, admits he expected this little girl to run into the street. In view of this admission, if you find that defendant, Trommer, did not have his car under such control, and you must consider that no action was taken by Trommer after he was aware of what the child was going to do and the time of impact, then you may find him neg'ii- *152 gent and if this negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries suffered by Karen, then you may bring in a verdict for the plaintiffs.”

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Bluebook (online)
184 A.2d 389, 199 Pa. Super. 145, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krywucki-v-trommer-pasuperct-1962.