Court Opinion

ID: 6253673
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 21:23:28.352939+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:29.569971
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Justice Moschzisker,
The plaintiffs’ son, Arthur A. Hicks, was killed in a right-angle collision between a team which he was driving and a trolley car of the defendant company, about noon, on August 2, 1912, at the junction of two streets in the City of Altoona. • The court below entered a compulsory nonsuit, which it subsequently refused to remove; plaintiffs have appealed.
It appears from the testimony that, at the time of the collision, the deceased was just over the age of 18 years, and an experienced horseman; that the defendant’s trolley car was running at a speed of from 30 to 35 miles an hour; that it approached the crossing in question without any effort on the part of the motorman to stop or properly to control its speed, and without blowing its whistle or giving other warning; that, in the vicinity of the accident, the ciirb lines of both streets were occu*151pied by trees, and the view of the driver, from Ms seat on the wagon, was interfered with by their foliage to such an extent that, in all probability, he could not see the approaching car until he had passed the curb line of the highway upon which it was being operated.
Several witnesses testified that plaintiffs’ son was first observed by those on the car when it was about 200 feet distant from the point of the collision, and at that time his horses’ heads were within some 12 feet of the track, advancing on a down grade at “a little jog” or “fast walk”; furthermore, that Hicks was then “pulling up” or “reining in” his team. Another witness said that immediately after the front of the wagon emerged from the house line, or when the horses were about 20 feet from the track, the driver appeared to be endeavoring to stop his team; but his efforts were in vain, for the horses were struck and dragged for a distance of about 130 feet before the car came to a standstill, Hicks, in the meantime, having been thrown from his seat and run over by the car. Those observers who were called to the stand all seem to agree the car was approaching with such rapidity that it was impossible for the driver of the wagon to avoid the accident; but whether or not the latter did all for his own protection which a reasonably careful man should have done, were proper issues for the jury—not the witnesses or the trial judge—to decide.
This court has more than once said that it is the duty of a driver to look in both directions immediately before entering upon the tracks of a street railway; but, on the evidence in this case, the jury might have found that plaintiffs’ son made a proper observation, saw the rapidly advancing cár and did all within his power to prevent the accident. We have said also that, when approaching a trolley track, a driver must take due. care to get his horses under control; but it is a matter of general knowledge that a team cannot always be effectually managed, even by the best of horsemen; therefore, whether or not Hicks made a reasonable effort to exer*152cise the care required by the peculiar circumstances at bar, is an issue of fact, not of law. In other words, both the question of the defendant’s negligence and that of the driver’s alleged contributory negligence must be determined by a jury.
The assignments of error are sustained, and the judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.