Stong v. PennDot

56 Pa. D. & C.4th 524, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 353
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County
DecidedOctober 15, 2001
Docketno. 98-01,514
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Pa. D. & C.4th 524 (Stong v. PennDot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stong v. PennDot, 56 Pa. D. & C.4th 524, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 353 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

KIESER, J.,

Before the court is plaintiffs’ post-trial motions following a jury verdict in favor of defendants, which was returned on May 31, 2001. This court issued an order granting a new trial as to the liability of the defendant Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Transportation, on October 5, 2001. This opinion is written in support of that order.

This matter arises from a tragic accident, which occurred on September 4, 1998. On this date, plaintiffs’ decedent, Robert Stong, age 11, was standing on the east side of a bridge owned by defendant PennDOT. The bridge spans Mill Creek on State Route 2039, Warrens-ville Road, Loyalsock Township, Lycoming County. Defendant Sabrina Day was the operator of a vehicle which [526]*526was crossing the bridge, driving northerly. As Ms. Day’s vehicle traveled past him, Robert Stong came into contact with Ms. Day’s vehicle and was killed. The jury, in answering special verdict questions, found PennDOT was negligent but held the negligence was not a substantial factor in causing the death of Robert Stong. The jury found defendant Day was not negligent.

The post-trial motion, filed June 8, 2001, as amended August 24,2001, after transcripts were prepared, asserts that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and contrary to the law on the holding that PennDOT’s negligence was not a substantial factor in causing the death of Robert Stong and that defendant Day was not negligent in the manner of her operation of the motor vehicle. The motion also asserts the court improperly charged the jury in relation to the matter of negligence of the deceased and further asserts a new trial must be granted because of the misconduct of a juror.

SUMMARY OF FACTS AND EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

The evidence introduced at trial must be viewed in a light most favorable to the defendants as verdict winners. The testimony in many respects was consistent as to the manner in which the accident happened but, not surprisingly, inconsistent as to some details.1 Robert Stong had missed his school bus and was walking home along Warrensville Road, State Route 2039, when he stopped on a bridge over East Mill Creek. He was standing on the bridge on the downstream easterly side looking into [527]*527a pool of water. As he stood there, two cars approached the bridge from opposite directions. Defendant Day was the operator of one of those vehicles. She was traveling northerly placing Stong on her right. As both cars met on the bridge, Robert Stong raised up from his position looking over the edge of the bridge and turned to his left, away from the Day vehicle, raising his right leg as if to take a step. In doing so, his body collided with the vehicle being operated by Sabrina Day which propelled him onto the hood of her car causing him to strike the windshield, post and side mirror of her vehicle. He was thrown some 40 feet through the air. This impact caused his death.

The bridge was built in 1938, and uncontested testimony presented by witnesses substantiated the bridge is narrow and there is no walkway for pedestrians, bicyclists or others on the bridge. Testimony established that the bridge had never been widened since its construction, but also that over the years the width of the vehicle cartways had been enlarged and the sides replaced.

The following is a summary of the testimony relevant for post-verdict matters.

A. State Police Officer Paul Wilson

(1) Investigating State Police Officer Paul Wilson, testified to the following: He was the investigating officer and called to the scene of the accident on Warrensville Road on the bridge over East Mill Creek on September 4, 1998. (Trial transcript, p. 3.)

(2) That there were no adverse weather conditions. (Trial transcript, p. 4.) That Sabrina Day was the opera[528]*528tor of a 1987 Chrysler New Yorker and she had been involved in the accident. (Trial transcript, p. 4.)

(3) That he interviewed the driver and made notes of what she told him. (Trial transcript, p. 5.)

(4) That she told him “She was going about 40 miles per hour, she saw Mr. Stong standing along the roadway with his back to the roadway. She slowed and started to swing out along the east side of the road where Mr. Stong was standing, but there was another vehicle coming in the opposite direction so she was unable to swerve that far to the left. As she got to where Mr. Stong was standing, he abruptly turned counterclockwise and took a step towards the center of the roadway and into the side of her car.” (Trial transcript, p. 6 (emphasis added)— this is the only testimony which indicates the boy may have completed a step before colliding with the car and was not verified by Ms. Day’s trial testimony.)

(5) That there were no skid marks on the highway. (Trial transcript, p. 8.)

(6) That the impact occurred on the right side of the vehicle between the door and the back of the right front fender well. That he took measurements on the bridge and that “the distance from the curb along both edges of the bridge was 15 1/2 inches to the fog line which is a solid white line along the side of the roadway. The fog line to the center was 104 inches and in the southbound lane it was 105 inches. (See trial transcript, pp. 10 and 11.)

(7) “On the bridge where the accident occurred there are no sides to the bridge, only guardrails along the sides along the elevated curb.” (Trial transcript, p. 12.)

[529]*529(8) He believes that the distance that the child was thrown at the time of impact to the place where the body landed was approximately 40 feet. (Trial transcript, pp. 13 and 14.)

(9) That the visibility for the Sabrina Day vehicle was approximately 330 feet approaching the bridge and for a period of 300 feet the boy would have or should have been visible to someone approaching from that direction. (Trial transcript, p. 14.)

B. Tammy J. Hamilton

(1) At the time of the accident, she was a passenger in the right front seat of the Sabrina Day auto. (Trial transcript, p. 3.)

(2) Prior to the impact, there was no braking on the part of the automobile. (Trial transcript, p. 5.)

(3) Just prior to the impact, the Stong boy was looking down over the bridge into the water. (Trial transcript, p. 6.)

(4) That the car passing them, coming from the opposite direction, was right there at the same time as the impact with the boy. (Trial transcript, p. 7.)

(5) That Sabrina Day did not swerve at all. (Trial transcript, p. 7.)

(6) That she does not believe that the boy knew that the Sabrina Day vehicle was there. (Trial transcript, p. 7.)

(7) That Sabrina Day did not see the boy; that “she told me she didn’t see him; she didn’t even know the accident even happened at first.” (Trial transcript, p. 8.)

[530]*530(8) That the boy did not take any steps into the highway. (Trial transcript, p. 9.)

(9) That it looked like he was just getting ready to take a step. (Trial transcript, p. 9.)

(10) That he never lifted his left foot off the ground. (Trial transcript, p. 9.)

(11) That he turned counterclockwise (trial transcript, p. 10), meaning he turned away from the oncoming vehicle that struck him.

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Related

Stong v. Commonwealth, Department of Transportation
817 A.2d 576 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Pa. D. & C.4th 524, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stong-v-penndot-pactcompllycomi-2001.