Reaney v. Jones

75 Pa. Super. 355, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 5, 1921
DocketAppeal, No. 212
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Pa. Super. 355 (Reaney v. Jones) 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
Reaney v. Jones, 75 Pa. Super. 355, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18 (Pa. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Plaintiff, while walking on York Road on a dark rainy evening, was struck and injured by defendant’s automobile. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appealed and now contends that (1) the record is so destitute of evidence of negligence by defendant that the jury should not have been permitted to find that fact; and (2) plaintiff’s conduct in the circumstances was so clearly negligent as to require the court to find that fact and not to submit the evidence on that subject to the jury. It is urged that we now find either fact in accord with appellant’s contention and enter judgment for appellant.

Plaintiff and defendant had the right to use the highway, and the verdict establishes that while exercising that right, defendant failed to perform some duty incident to its enjoyment. Duty required due care in the circumstances. Due care depends upon the legal probability that injury will result if such care be not observed. We must then inquire what if anything was done or omitted by defendant which at the time she should have considered as likely in a legal sense to cause damage in the circumstances in which she exercised her right? What, if any, negligence could the jury have found? In answering that question the authorities require us to consider established all facts which the jury could find from the evidence. They will appear by brief quotations from the record. Plaintiff said “It was raining and the lights were all lit on York Road. Every-[358]*358tiling was plain to be seen, and I was......hurrying home. I did not have any umbrella. I had a big coat and I had furs on. There are not any sidewalks on either side of York Road. I always watched for automobiles or for trolley cars or anything, to come along and I heard nothing — no horn was blown or anything, to give anybody any notice, and the next thing I knew I woke up in the Jewish hospital......”

A policeman testified: “Just about 6:05 January 2d, Thursday night, it was raining very hard and I just went across the street at Spencer and York Road and just at the southwest corner I happened to look north and I saw this automobile coming about 30 feet away from me, with the lights shining and I saw an object on the front of the machine and I put out my hands and went over— called for them to stop and when they stopped I saw it was a lady wedged between the bumper and the radiator of the car in a sitting-up position with her head lying on the left mudguard. I then dragged her off and took her to the sidewalk and sat her on the sidewalk and the first thing she asked for when I sat her on the sidewalk was ‘where is my muff and pocketbook?’. I......went up to find — to try to see if I could locate the pocketbook and muff that she was speaking about. I walks about maybe 150 to 200 feet north of Sparks street and on the southbound rail lay the muff and about three feet from the muff I found the pocketbook, about three or four feet from the rail.” In cross-examination he testified, “Q. From the position that Miss Reaney was on that car, was her head above the radiator where she could be seen from the driver’s seat? A. No, sir. Q. That is, her position was such that she would be invisible to the driver? A. That is right.” He stated that where he “picked up the muff, on both sides of the street are the traction company incandescent lights. Those both lights were out at that time......I used my flashlight to locate the pocketbook and muff.”

[359]*359Defendant herself testified that just after passing another automobile, — to which we shall refer presently— she “heard a sort of a bumping and my little boy in front who was with me said, ‘What is that?’ and I said ‘It must be a loose cobblestone.’ We were then on the cobbles and then I went on. I was still in second gear and just going as slowly as possible. We heard another little bump, and he said, ‘I think there is something loose on the car.’ I said, ‘Yes, I think it is the bumper, and when we get to the top of the hill I will stop under the light and we will fix it......’ ” After she had almost reached the place where she intended to do so, the policeman stopped her and removed plaintiff. Defendant then for the first time saw plaintiff and said “......I was very much horrified to see such a thing, as I had no idea that anybody was on the front of the car,......” She was an experienced driver and stated that she was driving up hill at the time “between eight and ten miles on that grade — it is a very low-powered car.” During cross-examination she testified, “Q. And you know the condition of York Road between Chelten avenue and Spencer-street, don’t you? A. Yes. Q. You know how pedestrians are required to walk, do you, in using that street? A. Yes. Q. You don’t know really when you struck Miss Reaney at all, do you? A. I don’t know when the accident happened. Q. The only thing you recall was when you had this bump which you thought was a. loose cobblestone and afterwards another and you thought something was loose in the front of the car? A. I thought the bumper had become loosened. Q. The only time you knew Miss Reaney was on the automobile was when Officer Shafer stopped you? A. Yes, when I got out of the car and saw her on the front. Q. What was the condition of your windshield? A. It was raining. It had a little rain on it but it was perfectly clear.” We pass as immaterial here, the dispute in the evidence as to whether she became unconscious immediately or not; defendant said after plaintiff was removed from the car [360]*360that plaintiff “seemed a little hysterical.” Plaintiff must have been carried on the hamper a distance of from 150 to 200 feet; she made no outcry; she must have been sufficiently conscious when removed to make the statements which certain witnesses agree she made concerning her pocketbook and furs; these were located shortly afterward in consequence of what she said and from their location, the place of collision was determined.

There was dispute about the street lights; in cross-examination plaintiff was asked “Q. And on the night in question it was a very dark and rainy one, wasn’t it? A. Yes. Q. And very great difficulty to see anybody a great distance away? A. There was a light. Q. Did you see any lights yourself that evening? A. Yes, I did; or I would not walk there.” The street car tracks are on each side of the street where the accident occurred. Plaintiff said she was walking on the right side of the street “about two feet from the trolley track......” She had left a street car at the Chelten avenue intersection of York Road and was walking on York Road toward Sparks street, described in the evidence as about two squares from Chelten avenue, and when struck, plaintiff says she had walked “about half way.” She testifies that after going about half of that distance she turned around to see whether anything was approaching and .there was nothing. The jury may therefore have found that she had walked about a square when struck. She was walking along a highway ahead of defendant and defendant did not see her. Obviously the jury and not the court must find whether plaintiff walked along the road for about a square as she testified and whether with the street lights, or absence of such lights, considering the heavy rain, defendant should have seen plaintiff so walking in time to avoid a collision. If plaintiff was there as the jury found, defendant according to the evidence must have been driving without being able to see where she was driving, a use of the highway [361]*361not consistent with due care for the rights of others lawfully using the highway at the same time.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Presser v. Dougherty
86 A. 854 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Smith v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.
97 A. 575 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)
Flanigan v. McLean
110 A. 370 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Davis v. Osborn
62 Pa. Super. 291 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)
Hagos v. Reading Transit & Light Co.
66 Pa. Super. 422 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Pa. Super. 355, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reaney-v-jones-pasuperct-1921.