Younginger v. Heckler

410 A.2d 340, 269 Pa. Super. 445, 1979 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2889
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 14, 1979
Docket1067
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 410 A.2d 340 (Younginger v. Heckler) 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
Younginger v. Heckler, 410 A.2d 340, 269 Pa. Super. 445, 1979 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2889 (Pa. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

*447 VAN der VOORT, Judge:

This is a trespass action involving survival and wrongful death claims brought by the Administratrix of the Estate of Albert W. Younginger (hereinafter, the plaintiff) against appellant, George P. Heckler, Jr., (hereinafter Heckler). Heckler joined Clare Conricode, (hereinafter, Conricode), as an additional defendant, but subsequently died and his widow, as administratrix of his estate, was substituted for him. Plaintiff has taken the depositions of the additional defendant, Conricode, a police officer and two witnesses to the accident in which Younginger was killed. No depositions, affidavits or testimony of any sort was taken by or on behalf of Heckler. The additional defendant, Conricode, filed a Motion for Summary Judgment, which the trial court granted, dismissing the complaint against Conricode by an Order dated February 16, 1978. The administratrix of Heckler, the original defendant, has appealed from that Order. The plaintiff has not appealed.

The appellant’s objection to the Order is based on two arguments: (1) that it was error to consider the testimony of Conricode because Heckler’s death makes Conricode’s testimony incompetent under the so-called dead man’s rule; and (2) that the credibility of the witnesses whose depositions were the basis of the court’s order of dismissal should have been submitted to a jury. We find no merit in either contention.

The accident out of which this suit arose occurred about 6:30 P.M. on December 5, 1975 on a four-lane highway in Montgomery County known as Moreland Road. It was dark at the time and the highway was dimly illuminated from the lights of a nearby service station. The decedent, Albert W. Younginger, wearing dark green clothes, undertook to walk across this thoroughfare at a point about one hundred feet from the nearest pedestrian walkway which was at a highway intersection controlled by traffic lights. A double yellow line divided the two lanes of traffic which were east bound from the two lanes which were west bound but there was no barrier or space between the east bound and the *448 west bound traffic lanes. Traffic was reasonably heavy and cars were using all four lanes of the highway. When Younginger arrived at the middle of the highway, he stopped near the double yellow dividing line about a foot within the east bound lane of traffic. At this time, Heckler was driving east on the highway in the left lane and Conricode was driving west in her left lane. She was proceeding under the speed limit and at a reasonable rate of speed. She observed Younginger standing near the middle of the highway when she was about five car lengths from him and slowed her vehicle and applied her brakes in response to this observation. At that time, there was traffic in both west bound lanes.

While thus standing slightly within the east bound lane of traffic, Younginger was struck by the vehicle driven by Heckler. This impact caused Younginger to be thrown across the double yellow line dividing east and west bound traffic into the path of the Conricode car. He was struck by the Conricode vehicle and dragged under it some twenty-six feet before the car was brought to a stop. He was dead when removed from under the Conricode vehicle.

There was no evidence in contradiction of this testimony which was taken on the plaintiffs depositions from Conricode, two eye witnesses who were riding in an automobile immediately behind her car at the time of the accident, and a patrolman who reached the scene of the accident within a couple of minutes after its occurrence.

Appellant, Heckler, contends that Conricode’s testimony was inadmissible as against the appellant under the so-called dead man’s rule and that reversible error was committed in considering it. The dead man’s rule as embodied in the Act of May 23,1887, P.L. 158 § 5(e), 28 P.S. § 322, provides that where any party to a thing or contract in action is dead and his right has passed to a party on the record who represents his interest in the subject in controversy, then any surviving or remaining party to the transac *449 tion, or any other party whose interest is adverse to the decedent is not a competent witness in any matter occurring before the death of that party. This is an exception to the general rule that no “interest, or policy of law . shall make any person incompetent as a witness”. Act of May 23, 1887, P.L. 158 § 4, 28 P.S., § 314. Competency of a witness is the rule and incompetency the exception. Hendrickson Estate, 388 Pa. 39, 44, 130 A.2d 143, 146 (1957).

The dead man’s rule has been held not to apply to an action brought as both a wrongful death and a survival action. Dennick v. Scheiwer, 381 Pa. 200, 113 A.2d 318 (1955). The court reasoned that the defendant was a competent witness in the wrongful death action because it was not brought for damages sustained by the decedent but for damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the decedent’s death, and that while the act would appear to apply to that portion of the claim which was the survival action, “[t]o tell the jury to listen to the defendant in one claim and [to] close its ear in the other might possibly be technically correct but practically senseless”. (381 Pa. at p. 202, 113 A.2d at p. 319).

Despite this ruling, the appellant contends that the dead man’s rule should apply to bar consideration of Conricode’s testimony because of Heckler’s death. We think not for several reasons.

Conricode’s testimony was taken on a deposition initiated by the plaintiff. Her testimony with respect to her liability to the plaintiff both in the death claim and as a survival action is competent as between herself and the plaintiff, both because the plaintiff called her as a witness, 28 P.S. 381, and because of the ruling in Dennick, supra, that the dead man’s rule has no application to an action in which both a death claim and a survival action are asserted.

This is a litigation between the plaintiff and two defendants. Conricode and Heckler are not adversaries but joint *450 defendants, each liable to the plaintiff, if to anyone, but not to each other. The plaintiff might obtain a judgment against either or both of the defendants, and in the latter event the issue of contribution between the defendants would arise. It is not before us now.

Conricode’s testimony is not being offered in a dispute between her and Heckler. The challenged testimony dealt only with Conricode’s conduct at the scene of the accident and her negligence or lack of it. It did not address itself at any point to the conduct or liability of her co-defendant, Heckler, either to the plaintiff or to Conricode. It was concerned solely with Conricode’s responsibility to the plaintiff.

Conricode’s Motion for Summary Judgment put at issue whether the plaintiff had any basis for asserting a claim against Conricode, and if she did not, the issue of contribution between the defendants will not arise. Appellant’s contingent interest in that issue is too remote to bring the dead man’s rule into play upon her behalf, Gaston Estate, 361 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
410 A.2d 340, 269 Pa. Super. 445, 1979 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/younginger-v-heckler-pasuperct-1979.