From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Lookatch v. Robinson

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
May 27, 1935
179 A. 66 (Pa. 1935)

Summary

In Lookatch v. Robinson, 318 Pa. 545, 179 A. 66, it was held that the imperative test in determining whether or not the court should reverse a judgment because it is excessive in amount is whether it is so high, under all the circumstances, as to shock the sense of justice of the court.

Summary of this case from Zarek v. Fredericks

Opinion

May 13, 1935.

May 27, 1935.

Appeals — Review — Judgment on verdict — Determination of points as matter of law — Amount of verdict — Excessive.

1. In deciding whether or not it is the duty of this court to reverse a judgment appealed from, because the jury should have determined, as a matter of law, a point or points in a different way from that which they did, we must accept as true all the evidence which sustains or tends to sustain the jury's findings in regard thereto. [546]

2. The imperative test in determining whether or not this court should reverse a judgment because it is excessive in amount, is whether it is so high, under all the circumstances, as to shock our sense of justice. [547]

Negligence — Automobiles — Crossing — Automobile in intersecting street 300 feet away — Anticipating ordinary care by another.

3. Ordinarily, a trial court would not be justified in deciding, as a matter of law, that it was negligence for an automobilist to make a right-angled crossing of a 35 feet wide public highway, if the only possible danger which could arise, if any, would be from another automobile which was 300 feet away at the time the crossing was begun. [547]

4. One using a highway has the right to act on the belief that another occupant thereof will exercise ordinary care to protect him and his property from injury. [547]

Argued May 13, 1935.

Before SIMPSON, KEPHART, SCHAFFER, MAXEY, DREW and LINN, JJ.

Appeal, No. 172, Jan. T., 1935, by defendant, from judgment of C. P. Potter Co., March T., 1933, No. 123, in case of John F. Lookatch v. J. French Robinson. Judgment affirmed.

Trespass for personal injuries. Before LEWIS, P. J.

The opinion of the Supreme Court states the facts.

Verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $9,959.08. Defendant appealed. Error assigned, among others, was refusal of judgment n. o. v.

Samuel H. Humes, with him Archibald F. Jones and John E. Cupp, for appellant.

Andrew Dunsmore, with him Wm. F. DuBois and T. F. Murphy, for appellee.


This record is the picture of another futile attempt by the owners of two automobiles, traveling in opposite directions on the same public highway, to compel them, while in motion, to occupy the same spot thereon at one and the same time. As a result, plaintiff sues to recover damages for injuries to himself and his automobile, defendant counterclaims for damages to his automobile; the jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff; the court entered judgment thereon; and defendant appeals. The judgment must be affirmed.

Appellant's contentions here are: (1) He was not negligent; (2) Plaintiff was negligent; (3) The judgment is excessive. As each of these is an attempt to compel the adoption of one of appellant's contentions in whole or in part, we must, in considering them, accept plaintiff's evidence in regard thereto, as true: Mountain v. American Window Glass Co., 263 Pa. 181, 184.

Here, the jury could not have been expected to accept defendant's story that he was not traveling fast, at the time of the collision, when, admittedly, after he had locked his wheels so that they could not revolve, his car skidded 67 feet along the highway, and then struck plaintiff's car so heavy a blow that it was knocked through the air on to private property, a distance of 30 feet, and so high that persons on or near the highway could see under it, and it turned, during its journey through the air, so that it faced, when it alighted, in the opposite direction from that which it occupied when it was hit.

Nor could defendant properly have expected the court below to charge, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence because he started at right angles across a 35-feet-wide highway, without waiting for another automobile, then 300 feet away, to pass in front of him, there being no other vehicle between the two cars. No one, before the event, would have thought there was necessary danger in such a situation, and plaintiff had the right to act on the belief that the other automobilist would exercise "ordinary care . . . to protect him and his property from injury": Lewis v. Wood, 247 Pa. 545, 549. Indeed, it seems clear that appellant could not have limited himself, under the situation as admittedly he saw it when plaintiff started across the road, to the "careful and prudent speed" enjoined upon him by section 1002, of the Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905, 973, as amended by the Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 751, 791.

On the question of the amount of the verdict, while it appears to be above the average, we cannot say, approved as it was by the jury and the court below, that it is so high as to shock our sense of justice. That is the "imperative" test on this point: King v. Equitable Gas Co., 307 Pa. 287.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.


Summaries of

Lookatch v. Robinson

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
May 27, 1935
179 A. 66 (Pa. 1935)

In Lookatch v. Robinson, 318 Pa. 545, 179 A. 66, it was held that the imperative test in determining whether or not the court should reverse a judgment because it is excessive in amount is whether it is so high, under all the circumstances, as to shock the sense of justice of the court.

Summary of this case from Zarek v. Fredericks

In Lookatch v. Robinson, 318 Pa. 545, 179 A. 66 (1935) we held that a driver of an automobile was not guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law merely because he started, at right angles, across a thirty-five foot wide highway without waiting for an automobile, then three hundred feet away, to pass in front of him, there being no other vehicle between the two cars.

Summary of this case from Holton v. Gibson
Case details for

Lookatch v. Robinson

Case Details

Full title:Lookatch v. Robinson, Appellant

Court:Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: May 27, 1935

Citations

179 A. 66 (Pa. 1935)
179 A. 66

Citing Cases

Zarek v. Fredericks

In addition to this, it was the duty of the parent or parents to give the boy care and necessary medical and…

Underhill v. Tabbutt

Rankin v. Boyle, 328 Pa. 284, 195 A. 36. Having committed his car to crossing the lane of traffic 150 feet in…