Rocco v. Tillia

162 A. 495, 106 Pa. Super. 597, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 289
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1932
DocketAppeal 18
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 A. 495 (Rocco v. Tillia) 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
Rocco v. Tillia, 162 A. 495, 106 Pa. Super. 597, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 289 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This was an action of trespass for personal injuries sustained and a verdict resulted in favor of plaintiff. The court refused a motion for judgment n. o. v. which has been assigned for error.

The accident complained of occurred on the road leading in a southerly direction from New Castle to *599 the Borough of Ellwood City. This is an improved state highway with a concrete driveway eighteen feet in width. The place where the accident occurred was at a point where there were farms on both sides of the road, the neighborhood being a farming community. Plaintiff was operating an automobile over this road, going in a southerly direction. When he had reached a point about five miles from the city of New Castle, he claimed that the brakes on one of the wheels of his automobile locked and caused his automobile to slip off the highway into the ditch on his left hand side, or the east side of said highway. It had been raining and snowing during the day, and it was snowing at the time of the accident. The plaintiff summoned a wrecking car owned by S. TI. Stillwagon, who shortly thereafter arrived at the scene of the accident. The wrecking car was put in position so that it was headed north with its rear end towards the car that was in the ditch. Its left front wheel was on the concrete highway and the rear wheels on the berm. Before beginning the work of lifting the car out of the ditch, Stillwagon posted men two hundred feet in either direction on the road to warn approaching automobiles. At the time it was dusk or dark. There was room on the concrete road for a car to pass between the west edge of the concrete road and the wrecking car. Plaintiff was assisting Stillwagon in raising the automobile when the defendant approached driving in a northerly direction. Plaintiff was on the southerly side of the wrecker and Stillwagon was betwéen the wrecker and the car in the ditch. Defendant testified that he did not see the wrecker until he was nine feet from it and attempted to stop his car, but on account of the slippery condition of the road was unable to do so, and his car struck the plaintiff and injured him, and also struck the wrecker.

According' to plaintiff’s testimony, the road was level about 350 or 400 yards of a straight stretch north *600 to south from the point of the accident; that the lights in the wrecking car were lit; it was parked in a diagonal manner facing towards New Castle; that the left half of the highway was unobstructed and open for traffic; that fifteen or twenty cars passed him after the wrecker arrived and before he was injured. He was working the hoist on the wrecker at the time, standing alongside on the concrete. Stillwagon was to the rear of the wrecker, fastening the chain; he did not know whether there were any lights on the side of the wrecker. He claimed the accident occurred between five-thirty and six, or six-fifteen; that it was just dusk. He did not have the light's on his car lit while he was driving before the accident, but lit them when the car was in the ditch.

Stillwagon, owner of the wrecking car, testified that the road is level south of the point of collision close to a half mile, and a quarter of a mile in the opposite direction; that it was snowing, rain with snow and some snow on the driving surface; that the two rear wheels of his wrecking car were off the concrete, the right front wheel was off the concrete, the left front wheel was on the concrete. While working in between the wrecker and the ditched car, standing by the edge of the cement, he was struck. He had, when he first came there, directed two men, one to go to the New Castle side, and the other to the Ellwood City side, to caution traffic. They went out the. first thing after he got there. He did not remember whether the lights were lit on his track; to his recollection they were not. The accident, he said, occurred a few minutes past six in the evening; it wasn’t dark, but it was getting dusk. He did not hear any warning sounded by the defendant before he was struck. The left rear fender of his truck was smashed, three spokes smashed in the rear wheel. He saw the man he had sent towards Ellwood a couple of hundred feet away ten or fifteen minutes before the crash.

*601 Joseph Pratt, who had been in the car with plaintiff, testified that he had been sent by Stillwagon to direct traffic on the south side of the wreck, and that he had gone 250 or 300 feet south, and directed traffic coming along from Ellwood City; that five or ten cars had passed from the direction of Ellwood City after the wrecker came and before the collision; that he saw the defendant coming, and witness, while on the right hand side of the pavement, threw both arms out and waved him down; that defendant’s lights showed, and witness thought he was slacking down; he saw that he was coming at a pretty good speed, and witness fell in the ditch; by the time he picked himself up, he heard the crash as defendant’s car hit. He could not tell the speed at which defendant’s car was coming.

Nick Cannavine, who also was in plaintiff’s car before the accident, testified that he had been sent by Stillwagon to the side towards New Castle, and that he went about 150 yards in that direction. That 15 or 20 cars passed the wrecker before the collision which he says occurred a little past six o’clock.

Charles W. Rocco, a brother of plaintiff, testified that he was called to the scene of the accident by plaintiff, and arrived there before the wrecker. That two men had been ordered out, one in either direction to slow up the traffic; that he was standing between the wrecker and the wrecked car, right beside plaintiff, directing the traffic. His first attention directed to defendant’s car was when Pratt yelled for him to stop; he then noticed Pratt fall or slip over in the ditch; witness then ran around and waved his hands to caution defendant, for the latter couldn’t get stopped, and he hit Stillwagon and pinned plaintiff between the wrecker and the bumper of defendant’s car. When he first noticed defendant’s car about 200 feet away, it was traveling at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour, and just before the crash about fifteen miles an *602 hour; he saw defendant’s ear “weaving” when it was 150 feet away; defendant’s lights were not burning.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A. 495, 106 Pa. Super. 597, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocco-v-tillia-pasuperct-1932.