Smathers v. Pittsburg & Butler Street Railway Co.
Smathers v. Pittsburg & Butler Street Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In the presentation of this case there has been a confusion of the stop, look and listen rule and the rule which imperatively requires the driver of a team to look for an approaching car immediately before driving upon the tracks of a street railway at a right-angled crossing of intersecting streets. The first rule applies to public crossings over what are commonly known as steam railroads, while the second relates to the dut3>of a traveler as he approaches the tracks of a street railway laid upon a public street. The degree of care required is not the same in both instances, and our cases have never held that it was. The syllabi in some of the earlier eases do state that it is the duty of a traveler, about to drive across a street railway, to stop, look and listen at the edge of the tracks and his neglect to do so is negligence pér se. This appears in Ehrisman v. Passenger Railway Company, 150 Pa. 180, and in Wheela
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Smathers v. Pittsburg & Butler Street Railway Company
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- 28 cases
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- Syllabus
- Negligence — Street railways — Collision between car and wagon — Duty to “ stop, look and listen ” — Crossing. 1. It is the absolute duty of a traveler or the driver of a team at the intersection of two city streets upon which is laid a line of street railway to look immediately before going upon the tracks, and failure to do so is negligence per se. If when he looks he sees an approaching car so near as to make an attempt to cross dangerous, it is his duty to stop; or, if when he looks at the edge of the tracks his view is obstructed so that he cannot see it then becomes his duty to listen, and under some circumstances it may be his duty to stop as if when he looks and listens he still is in doubt about the location and movement of the car. If in any of these situations he fails in the performance of the duty required he is guilty of contributory negligence and cannot recover. 2. In such a case no question can arise as to the proper place to look or whether there is a better place as in steam railroad grade crossing cases, because the settled rule is that the place to look is immediately before going upon the tracks. What the driver of a team is required to do after looking depends upon what he sees when he looks. Whether he failed to perform his duty under the circumstances is sometimes a question of law for the court and sometimes of fact for the jury. If when he looks he sees a car so near as to make the attempt to cross dangerous and notwithstanding he attempts the crossing and a collision results he is so clearly guilty of contributory negligence that the court should say so as a matter of law. He can take no close chance except at his peril. If, however, when he looks he sees a car so far distant that in the exercise of ordinary prudent judgment he is justified in concluding that he can safely make the crossing and attempts to do so, it is for the jury to determine whether under the circumstances he should have stopped before attempting to drive over the tracks. 3. In an action by a wife against a street railway company to recover damages for the death of her husband, it appeared that at the time of the accident plaintiff and her husband were driving in a buggy approaching a crossing, the husband keeping a lookout in one direct tion and the wife in another. Both continued to look until the head of the horse was at the edge of the tracks. As the husband looked, he then saw for the first time a car rapidly approaching over an elevation in the street which obstructed a further view from the crossing. The car was running at an excessive rate of speed. The deceased immediately turned the head of the horse and attempted to drive along side of the track. Neither the horse nor the buggy were actually on the track, but the front wheel of the buggy was close enough to be caught by the overhang of the car. Held, that the question of the deceased’s contributory negligence was for the jury, and that a verdict and judgment for plaintiff should be sustained.