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Mathiasen v. Brennan

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 29, 1935
179 A. 438 (Pa. 1935)

Opinion

April 26, 1935.

June 29, 1935.

Negligence — Automobiles — Intersection — Through highway — Car turning left from intersecting highway — Failure to avoid accident.

In an action for injuries received by plaintiff when the automobile which he was driving on a through highway swerved at an intersection and collided with a telephone pole in an effort to avoid collision with defendant's car after the latter car had proceeded from the intersecting street and had turned left into the plaintiff's lane of travel on the through highway, a nonsuit was properly entered, where the evidence disclosed that plaintiff must have seen that defendant's car failed to stop when it crossed the far side of the intersection, which occurred at a time when plaintiff still had ample time to avoid an accident by decreasing his speed, and that plaintiff did not slacken his speed, however, or in any other way take precautions to avoid the danger which confronted him but continued straight ahead as defendant's car turned into the highway ahead of him until the cars were about a foot apart, at which time he swerved sharply to the right.

Argued April 26, 1935.

Before FRAZER, C. J., SIMPSON, KEPHART, SCHAFFER, MAXEY, DREW and LINN, JJ.

Appeal, No. 234, Jan. T., 1935, by plaintiff, from order and judgment of C. P. No. 5, Phila. Co., Dec. T., 1931, No. 9782, in case of M. A. Mathiasen v. Louis W. Brennan. Judgment affirmed.

Trespass for personal injuries. Before PARRY, J.

The opinion of the Supreme Court states the facts.

Compulsory nonsuit entered. Motion to take it off refused. Plaintiff appealed. Error assigned, among others, was refusal to take off nonsuit.

Rowland C. Evans, Jr., of Krusen, Evans, Shaw Campbell, for appellant.

Harold B. Beitler, for appellee, was not heard.


This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to take off a nonsuit entered in an action of trespass to recover damages for personal injuries. The automobile accident giving rise to this suit occurred in Delaware County at the point where Clifton Avenue intersects the Chester Pike from the north. In this vicinity the portion of the pike traveled by automobiles is separated by a double line of trolley car tracks. The northern side of the highway, 37 1/2 feet in width, is used by westbound traffic, and the southern side, which is 17 1/2 feet wide, accomodates a double lane of motor cars traveling in an eastward direction. Clifton Avenue intersects the Chester Pike at right angles from both the north and the south, forming in each instance what is known as a "T" intersection. The distance from the point at which the east line of South Clifton Avenue meets the pike to the west line of North Clifton Avenue is approximately 118 feet. The Chester Pike is a through highway which is marked by "stop" signs, one of which was placed at the northwest corner of the scene of the accident.

On November 14, 1931, at about 7:30 p. m., plaintiff was driving his car eastwardly on the Chester Pike. Defendant was going south in his automobile on North Clifton Avenue. Plaintiff had not quite reached the intersection of South Clifton Avenue when he first observed the lights of defendant's car, which he then estimated to be about 100 feet north of the pike. He proceeded ahead in the right-hand lane of traffic at a speed of 25 miles an hour. Plaintiff observed defendant's car pass the north curbline of Chester Pike without stopping and traverse the car tracks at the paved intersection preparatory to turning left into the easterly traffic driveway. Plaintiff did not slacken his speed, however, or in any other way take precautions to avoid the danger which confronted him. He continued straight ahead as defendant's car turned into the highway ahead of him until the cars were about a foot apart, when he swerved sharply to the right, colliding with a telephone pole on the grass twenty feet east of the east line of Clifton Avenue. Plaintiff drove his car approximately 150 feet from the time he first saw defendant's car without retarding his speed and he did this in the face of a danger which was, by his own testimony, obvious and increasingly imminent. Plaintiff must have known that if defendant turned into the highway ahead of him, the latter's car would necessarily swing into the lane of traffic in which plaintiff was traveling. Although he admitted he could have stopped within fifteen feet, he made no effort to avoid the danger until too late to escape an accident, and in these circumstances we agree with the court below that he was contributorily negligent and has no ground to recover against defendant.

The cases relied upon by appellant can all be distinguished upon their facts from the present case, and the statements contained therein can have no application to the situation before us. Appellant argues he was not expected to anticipate defendant would violate the traffic regulation which requires vehicles to stop before entering a through highway. This rule has no application here for plaintiff must have seen that defendant's car failed to stop when it crossed the northern side of the street, which occurred at a time when plaintiff, under his own testimony, still had ample time to avoid an accident by decreasing his speed.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Mathiasen v. Brennan

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 29, 1935
179 A. 438 (Pa. 1935)
Case details for

Mathiasen v. Brennan

Case Details

Full title:Mathiasen, Appellant, v. Brennan

Court:Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Jun 29, 1935

Citations

179 A. 438 (Pa. 1935)
179 A. 438

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