Sweeney v. Floyd

90 Pa. Super. 14, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1926
DocketAppeal 31
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 Pa. Super. 14 (Sweeney v. Floyd) 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
Sweeney v. Floyd, 90 Pa. Super. 14, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The jury in the court below found that plaintiff suffered serious injuries through the negligent operation by defendant of an automobile and returned a verdict fixing his damages at $2,000. Defendant’s point for binding instructions having been refused and his motions for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. overruled, this appeal followed. The assignments charge error: (a) in above rulings; (b) in refusing defendant’s second point; and (c) in sustaining an objection to the admission in evidence of a certain written statement signed by one of plaintiff’s wit *16 nesses and offered for the purpose of discrediting his testimony.

1. Plaintiff, a man about sixty-two years of age, was injured while returning from work to his home, located on the south side of Federal Street in the City of Philadelphia, about five o’clock on the afternoon of August 18,1924. The accident occurred in the vicinity of the intersection of three streets, each paved with asphalt and having a width of fifty feet from house line to house line, with twelve foot sidewalks on each side, and cartways twenty-six feet in width. These streets are Federal and 20th Streets and Point Breeze Avenue. Federal Street runs east and west and is crossed at right angles by 20th Street running north and south. At the southwest corner of Federal and 20th Streets Point Breeze Avenue begins and extends southwestwardly, thereby forming at this triple intersection a sharp angle with 20th Street south of Federal and a wider angle with Federal west of 20th.

The location of the cartways: and the sidewalks at the intersection is such that, if the sidewalk along the western side of Point Breeze Avenue were extended northeastwardly across the cartway of Federal Street, it would strike the sidewalk on the north side of Federal Street at a point some twenty feet west of the intersection of Federal and 20th Streets on the north side of Federal Street. There were no marks designating the path to be used by pedestrians at any of the five crossings here located. The uncontroverted testimony indicates that plaintiff, who had been familiar with the locality for seventeen years, after leaving a watchmaker’s shop located on the east side of 20th Street north of Federal walked south to the north side of Federal, turned west and crossed 20th Street at its intersection with the north side of Federal and then continued west on the north sidewalk of Federal Street to a point twenty or twenty-five feet west of 20th *17 Street. Being desirous of crossing to the south side of Federal Street, plaintiff, before stepping from the curb, looked both ways on Federal Street and saw a truck driven by one Robinson (called as a witness for plaintiff) approaching from the east and about to cross 20th Street, and also saw the automobile driven by defendant approaching from the west and then about midway of the block. From this point on the testimony is conflicting, both with respect to the manner in which plaintiff received his injuries and whether at that time he was traversing the cartway at a “crossing.” In response to a question directing him to tell just what happened after he stepped from the curb, plaintiff testified: “A. As I walked across I seen nothing until I got to the south side of the street and was knocked down. I seen a truck coming, and the truck stopped to let me pass. Then I went over to within a step or two, or two or three feet from the sidewalk, and I looked east to see if anything was coming that way, and I seen the automobile, and I pulled — stepped back, but I had no time and was struck and knocked down.- Q. You were struck by the automobile then? A. Yes. I pulled back a step, but I had no time to pull a step back, and it struck me. Q. What part of the car hit you? A. The fender.”

On the other hand the defendant’s version of the accident appears from these quotations from his testimony: “A. I was driving east on Federal Street, and this big truck was coming west. I noticed Mr. Sweeney first when he alighted from the sidewalk, and when he started to pass over, the truck was possibly around fifteen feet away from him, and I was about the same distance west of him, on the west side. As soon as Mr. Sweeney alighted from the sidewalk, I realized his plight. I could not see how he could possibly miss the two of us. I immediately applied the brakes and came to a stop. The truck coming *18 west blew Ms horn, and Mr. Sweeney, as he came from the sidewalk, had his head down. As the truck blew its signal, he immediately looked up and became startled and he made a dive across in front of the truck, missing the truck, and at that moment I had stopped, but he dashed into my car1, on the left front fender, and the momentum with which he hit my car sort of knocked him back possibly two or three feet away from my car, causing him to fall, and as that happened he was down about my front wheel. I immediately got out of the car and went to his: assistance.”

The evidence with respect to the exact location of plaintiff when injured with relation to the intersection of the sidewalk along the western side of Point Breeze Avenue and the sidewalk along the south side of Federal Street is conflicting and indicates distances varying from three or four feet to the width of an ordinary house, possibly twenty-five feet. Under tMs conflicting evidence and in view of the difficulty of determining, by reason of the convergence of the three streets, just where the driver of an automobile should reasonably expect to find pedestrians crossing the cart-ways, the learned trial judge submitted to the jury the question of determining “the crossing, the place where automobilists should expect persons to be crossing,” instructing them that the place where an ordinarily prudent man, looking at the situation as he came along, would expect pedestrians to cross was the place where an automobilist was bound to exercise a higher degree of care than between crossings, and on the other hand that a pedestrian “if he is crossing at any other part of the highway, that is, between crossings, is bound to- use a Mgher degree of care than at the crossing.” The questions relative to the duties of automobilists and pedestrians respectively at street crossings and along blocks between crossings, and to the defendant’s negligence and the plaintiff’s contri *19 butory negligence, were submitted to tbe jury in a charge so comprehensive and impartial that no exception thereto was taken by either party. After reviewing the respective contentions of the parties the court said to the jury “So if you believe defendant’s story as to how this accident happened, I don’t see any negligence on the part of the defendant.” The jury evidently did not accept the defendant’s version of the accident. In disposing of this branch of this appeal the testimony must not only be read in the light most advantageous to the plaintiff and all conflicts therein resolved in his favor, but he is also entitled to the benefit of every fact and inference of fact pertaining to the issues involved which may reasonably be deduced from the evidence: Uhler v. Jones, 78 Pa. Superior Ct. 313; Mountain v. American Window Glass Co., 263 Pa. 181.

Considering the whole record the following inferences of fact were justifiable under the evidence.

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

Related

Quartz v. Pittsburgh
16 A.2d 400 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Commonwealth v. Oyler
197 A. 508 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Michael v. Kirchner
11 Pa. D. & C. 771 (Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Pa. Super. 14, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-floyd-pasuperct-1926.