Mead v. Central Pennsylvania Traction Co.

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The plaintiff was driving his automobile across the track of the defendant company when his engine stalled and as a consequence his car stopped on the track. While in this position the automobile was struck by a street car of the defendant company, the street car moved a few feet after the collision, and plaintiff’s automobile was to some extent damaged. The plaintiff brought this action to recover of the defendant company, alleging that the collision had resulted from the negligence of those operating the street car. He recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below and the defendant appeals.

The plaintiff testified that the street car was at least 284 feet distant at the time his automobile came to a standstill upon the track. The street car approached the point of collision upon a descending grade, and just prior to the collision the plaintiff noticed that the motorman was making frantic efforts to stop the car. He also testified that he had stopped his automobile and looked and *403listened for street cars before attempting to cross the track, and that no car was then in sight. That he first saw the street car after his automobile had stopped upon the track. His testimony was contradicted by that of several witnesses called on behalf of the defendant, who said that the plaintiff had not stopped his automobile, that he had driven directly in front of the street car, when it was only twenty-five or thirty feet distant from the-point of crossing, and that when plaintiff’s automobile came to a standstill the motorman made every possible effort to stop the car, but the collision was unavoidable. If the witnesses for the defendant told the truth and were not mistaken, the employees of defendant company were guilty of no negligence in the management of the street car. Assuming that the testimony of the plaintiff would have warranted a finding that the employees of the defendant were guilty of negligence, then the conflict of evidence presented a question of fact upon which it was for the jury to pass/ The learned judge of the court below charged the jury as follows: “He (plaintiff) tells you that while he was on that car track, he stalled there, because his engine would not work, and the defendant’s car struck him, and injured his car. If he is right about that, if he looked before he went on that track, and saw no car coming, unless he was guilty of negligence in undertaking to go on when his car was out of order, then he has a right to recover; because, if his car went there and stalled there, and it was in plain sight of the motorman on the traction car, it was his business to stop before he struck him.” And again: “If, through no fault of his own, the car stalled on the street car track, and he could- not get away, he is not to be held responsible for that, but the defendant company was bound to see that car there, and stop before they got to it.” This instruction must have been understood by the jury as meaning that if the automobile stalled upon the street car track, through no fault of the plaintiff,- then the plaintiff was entitled to X'ecover if the street car struck the automobile; that the *404negligence of the defendant company was to be presumed from the mere fact that the street car was not stopped before it reached the automobile. This instruction ignored the undisputed fact that the street car was approaching upon a down grade and the testimony of the witnesses produced by the defendant, as to situation of the street car at the time the plaintiff attempted to pass in front of it, which if believed, ought to have prevented a recovery. The instructions were clearly erroneous: Crothers v. Philadelphia Electric Co., 218 Pa. 214. The first and second specifications of error are sustained.

The court after correctly instructing the jury,as to the measure of damages for the injury to the car, added: “You cannot allow interest on that as interest; but the Supreme Court of the state has said you may allow .... the best way to find out what damages for detention are is to calculate interest on, the amount of his loss from that time to this; and, if you return a verdict, you simply return a verdict for one gross sum.” This constituted an affirmative instruction that the plaintiff was entitled to damages for detention, and was erroneous. The right to compensation for delay in the payment of damages arising out of a tort depends upon the circumstances of the case, and is usually to be determined by the jury, not by the court, under the evidence submitted. If the delay in making a proper settlement has been due solely to the action of the defendant, the jury may properly allow compensation for that delay. If, on the other hand, the fault lies with the plaintiff by reason of an excessive and unconscionable demand, one which the defendant is required to protect himself against by litigation, the latter should not be penalized for the unwarranted conduct of the plaintiff and be compelled to make compensation for the delay: Pierce v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 232 Pa. 170. The plaintiff in the present case averred in his statement that he had been damaged in the sum of $2,000; he testified at the trial to damages in the neighborhood of $1,200, and the jury after hearing all the evidence returned a verdict for *405a little over one-half the latter amount. The third specification of error is sustained.

When the automobile of the plaintiff came to a standstill upon the street ear track as the result of the unexpected failure of its engine, it was his duty to signal with reasonable promptness to those operating the approaching street car, in order that they might know that the automobile could not be gotten off the track. What signal ought to be given in such a case must depend upon all the circumstances, and would, therefore, be a question for the jury. We are of opinion that it was error for the court below to charge the jury, as matter of law, that the plaintiff was not required to get out of his automobile and go upon the track to warn the motorman of the danger. Whether the plaintiff ought to have done so was for the jury to determine. The' fourth specification of error is sustained.

. The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.