Summary
In Kerr v. Augustine Const. Co., 158 Pa. Super. 576, 45 A.2d 913, the plaintiff was driving northerly and the defendant southerly.
Summary of this case from Fisher v. ReillyOpinion
September 26, 1945.
March 5, 1946.
Negligence — Automobiles — Turning across path of oncoming traffic — Contributory negligence — Speed of motor vehicle approaching on same roadway — Distance.
1. A motor vehicle driver who, in attempting to enter upon an intersecting street or driveway, turns his vehicle across the path of oncoming traffic and collides with another vehicle approaching on the same roadway, is contributorily negligent unless the accident would not have occurred had not the other driver increased his speed after the former had committed himself to the crossing.
2. Even a reasonably prudent man cannot determine the speed of a motor vehicle approaching him on the same roadway, nor its distance from him.
Before BALDRIGE, P.J., RHODES, HIRT, RENO, DITHRICH, ROSS and ARNOLD, JJ.
Appeal, No. 110, Oct. T., 1945, from judgment of M.C., Phila. Co., June T., 1944, No. 228, in case of Fletcher Kerr v. Augustine Construction Co., Inc. Judgment affirmed.
Cross actions in trespass for property damage. Before GLASS, J.
Verdict for plaintiff, Kerr, and against defendant in plaintiff Kerr's suit; verdict for Kerr in cross action; judgment entered for defendant n.o.v. Plaintiff, Kerr, appealed.
Henry Panfil, with him Moore, Gossling Panfil, for appellant.
Glenn A. Troutman, with him McWilliams, Wagoner Troutman, for appellee.
Argued September 26, 1945.
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered n.o.v. for defendant upon the ground of contributory negligence.
At about 1:30 P.M. the plaintiff was driving his truck northerly, and defendant was driving southerly on Limekiln Pike, a twenty foot wide macadam road in Montgomery County. Plaintiff, travelling at about four miles per hour, attempted to make a left-hand turn to enter a roadway on the western side. Before turning he saw defendant's vehicle travelling south on the pike at a distance which he afterward determined to be about 420 feet, and at an undeterminable speed. Plaintiff testified: "Well, I couldn't tell how fast he [Augustine] was going. He was coming toward me. You can't look sideways at him" . . . "I can't say how fast he was going." . . . "No man can tell with a thing coming toward him how fast it is going."
There was evidence that about 420 feet from the accident defendant's vehicle was travelling some 55 to 60 miles per hour. The collision occurred when the front of plaintiff's vehicle had passed over the western margin of the road so that all but about two feet of defendant's side of the road was occupied by plaintiff's car.
Plaintiff asks that an inference be drawn that defendant's speed must have been 65 or 70 miles per hour, in order to reach the point of collision within the time that it took plaintiff to move to the point of accident while travelling at a rate of four miles per hour. Such a calculation has too many variables to be of assistance. The rate of speed of the plaintiff's vehicle is but an estimate. The point that he started from with relation to the center line of the highway is problematical. The length in feet or inches of the part of his vehicle which was beyond the western margin of the road at the time of collision must be indefinite. A predication, therefore, of such excessive speed of defendant's vehicle cannot be ascertained from the facts in evidence. For present purposes the defendant was negligent. The question is the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. We deem it of no importance whether plaintiff was attempting to turn into a private driveway or a public highway. Likewise plaintiff's estimated speed of four miles per hour and that he could stop within three feet is of no importance.
As to oncoming traffic (not right angle traffic) the plaintiff's testimony recognizes the self-evident truth, that even a reasonably prudent man cannot determine the speed of a motor vehicle approaching him on the same roadway, nor its distance from him.
A plaintiff who turns his motor vehicle across the path of oncoming traffic is guilty of contributory negligence, unless the accident would not have occurred had not the defendant increased his speed after the plaintiff committed himself to the crossing. Cf. Hess v. Mumma, 144 Pa. Super. 313, 19 A.2d 524; Peters v. Shear, 351 Pa. 521, 41 A.2d 556. There is no evidence that defendant's speed was thus increased, nor can mathematical calculations supply that lack. In the present type of case the plaintiff may not relieve himself of contributory negligence by saying that he either misjudged the defendant's speed or formed no judgment at all, or that he thought it was safe to cross. An erroneous conclusion cannot be justified by an inadequate observation.
Judgment affirmed.