Hadley v. City of Coatesville
Hadley v. City of Coatesville
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The complaint in this appeal is that the court refused to give binding instructions for the defendant. The reason stated as a basis for such instruction was the contributory negligence of the appellee. The default of the defendant having been conceded, the defense rested wholly on the ability of the appellant to make it clearly appear that Mrs. Hadley negligently received her injury. This negligence is alleged to have existed in the failure of the plaintiff to have selected another route than the one over which she was going at the time she was hurt. The injury was received while she was crossing Oak Street diagonally in going to First Avenue. There was neither sidewalk nor crossing on Oak Street in this locality, but a path was used by pedestrians going toward First Avenue from the hillside on which the plaintiff lived. The other way led down a flight of stairs and up a bank. The latter way is that which the appellant alleges the plaintiff should have taken, and evidence was introduced to show that it was in a safe condition. That there was a choice of ways seems not to be disputed, but the instinct of self-preservation stands for proof of the exercise of care and there is affirmative evidence that the route taken by the plaintiff was a better one than that which the appellant contends is the way she should have gone. It appears from the evidence that she proceeded carefully in crossing the street and there is nothing in the testimony to suggest that she acted wilfully with the intention to test a hazardous crossing. The route was used not only by the plaintiff, but by other people, and it cannot be declared as a matter of law that the way chosen was so obviously dangenous as to have subjected the plaintiff to a charge of negligence in adopting it. The plaintiff testified that the route alleged by the defendant to have been the proper one was dangerous because of a long flight of steps without a handrail and was inconvenient because of the presence of deep mud resulting from a continued
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.