
    Kish, Appellant, v. City of Cleveland (Cleveland Transit System), Appellee.
    (No. 23584
    Decided January 12, 1956.)
    
      Mr. Coleman Kiss and Mr. Albert H. Kiss, for appellant.
    
      Messrs. Hornbeclt, Ritter & Victory and Mr. Robert Mooney, for appellee.
   Skeel, J.

This appeal is on questions of law from a judgment entered on a jury verdict for the defendant. The action is based on a collision between the automobile of the plaintiff and a streetcar of the defendant, which occurred at the intersection of East Ninth Street and Carnegie Avenue in Cleveland, whereby the plaintiff claims to have suffered personal injury and damage to his automobile. The plaintiff claims the following errors:

“1. The trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion to refile its amended answer to second amended petition which contained a so-called second defense, said second defense having previously been ordered stricken from the amended answer to second amended petition by previous order of the court, sitting in courtroom No. 1.
“2. The trial court erred by submitting, in writing to the jury, defendant’s ‘Special Charge Before Argument No. 1.’ ”

The following facts are not in dispute. The defendant was operating a streetcar south on East Ninth Street somewhat after 7 a. m. on September 3, 1949, and at that time the streetcar was approaching and passing through the intersection of East Ninth Street with Carnegie Avenue in the city of Cleveland moving in a southerly direction. The plaintiff, at the same time, was driving his 1936 Chevrolet automobile east on Carnegie Avenue, and, when he came to the intersection of East Ninth Street, the traffic control signal light was red for Carnegie Avenue traffic and green for East Ninth Street traffic. The plaintiff, who was driving in the middle lane of the three eastbound lanes of Carnegie Avenue, brought his automobile to a stop just west of the west crosswalk of East Ninth Street. The streetcar, when it got to the intersection, proceeded through, and, as it was doing so, the plaintiff started his automobile forward and a collision resulted. The disputed questions of fact have to do with when the traffic light changed and whether either or both parties were rightfully in the intersection or not, that is either in compliance with or in violation of the traffic signal controlling traffic at that intersection.

Carnegie Avenue is a very wide street. There are six traffic lanes marked off, three for east bound traffic and three for west bound traffic, as shown by the evidence.

To give consideration to the errors claimed, a detailed consideration of the evidence is necessary. The plaintiff’s first witness was a soldier coming to Cleveland to visit his wife on a 72 hour leave from Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. He refused to state how he happened to be going sonth on East Ninth Street at 7 a. m. to go to his wife’s address on West 11th Street, when coming from Warren on U. S. Route 422. This witness, while driving south on East Ninth Street, had stopped behind the streetcar involved in the collision as it took on a passenger at Eagle Avenue which is the first intersection on the west side of East Ninth Street, two to three hundred feet north of Carnegie Avenue. He testified that after the streetcar doors were shut and the streetcar started forward he passed the streetcar in second gear and then stopped for the red light at Carnegie. He said that the streetcar then passed him into the intersection, but by that time the plaintiff “had started through, when they both connected.” This witness could not remember what parts of the auto and streetcar collided. He said the streetcar then cleared the intersection and stopped. On cross-examination, when asked how far he was from the traffic light when he first noticed the light, he testified:

“I would say — I had just passed the streetcar or just was getting ready to pass it when I noticed the light changing and I knew I wasn’t going to make the light so I would say that I was approximately twenty-five to thirty feet from the intersection.
“Q. From the intersection? A. When the light turned to caution, yes.
“Q. By caution, you mean red or yellow? A. No, yellow.
“Q. Yellow? A. And when I approached the intersection, it had been red by the time I hit the intersection.”

This witness testified also that the front of the streetcar was south of Carnegie when the accident happened. This witness could not tell the speed of the streetcar at the time of the collision or what part of the streetcar came into contact with the automobile.

The second witness was driving east on Carnegie Avenue, the same as was the plaintiff, and had stopped at the west crosswalk of East Ninth Street on the red traffic signal in the east bound traffic lane next to the center of the street, so that the plaintiff was to his right. His description of the accident on direct examination was as follows:

“The light turned green. I started forward. I looked north on East Ninth Street and the streetcar was coming and I stopped. I pulled across the crosswalk and stopped. The fellow in the car next to me, in the second lane, I guess, he kept on going.”

This witness said that when the streetcar entered the intersection, the traffic light was red for East Ninth Street and that the streetcar was going 20 to 25 miles per hour. On cross-examination, he said the East Ninth Street crosswalk was seven or eight feet wide, that he may only have proceeded two feet when he stopped and that Kish kept on going and ran into the side of the streetcar. The witness was then shown plaintiff’s exhibit No. 1 (a picture of the streetcar) by plaintiff’s counsel, and he marked the point of impact at the front right corner of the streetcar. Upon cross-examination, he testified that his recollection of the facts was better in 1949, when he testified in another hearing under oath, than at this time. The record shows that in 1949 he testified under oath:

“Q. * * * You only moved a couple of feet? A. Yes, sir,
£ £ # # &
“Q. And he ran into the side of the streetcar back of the center doors, didn’t he? A. As I recall it, yes, sir.
“Q. Were these questions as you — and did you give these answers under oath? A. If you have them there I must have. Yes, sir.
“Q. And that was the truth? A. Yes, sir.”

The next witness testified he was standing on the southwest corner of the intersection. He said he was going downtown on errands. He said the traffic light was red for Ninth Street traffic. Further, on direct examination, he said he saw the streetcar pass a standing southbound automobile, that the streetcar went against the red light, that it was going 20 to 25 miles an hour and that he did not give his name to the police.

On cross-examination, he said the accident happened at 7 a. m. and that he was going to Bonds to look at suits because there was a sale. (Bonds’ store did not open until 10 a. m.) He said Bonds was to be the “culmination” of his errands and that he was going first to the Cleveland Cut Flower Company on Eagle Avenue, although at the first trial, he testified that Bonds was his only destination. He also said at the first trial that he was walking north on East Ninth Street from his place of work located on the west side of East Ninth Street south of Carnegie Avenue and was 50 feet from the corner when the collision occurred, that he saw the streetcar and auto when they were 15 or 20 feet apart and that the streetcar traveled five to six feet after the accident. It is a matter of common knowledge that a streetcar going 20 to 25 miles per hour could not possibly stop in five or six feet. The witness also said he gave his name to a passenger in plaintiff’s car, although the plaintiff said he was traveling alone.

The plaintiff testified that he was standing in the second eastbound traffic lane on Carnegie Avenue at the west crosswalk of East Ninth Street waiting for the light to change to green for Carnegie Avenue traffic; that when it changed, he started forward until he hit the streetcar; that he never looked to the left or saw the streetcar from the time he started forward until he hit it, having been in fact looking to the right because of the closeness of the car in the curb lane that turned right into East Ninth Street; and that he has no vision in his left eye as the result of an industrial accident in 1944, but did not list such physical defect on his application for a driver’s license. The plaintiff was due at work at 7 a. m. at 12th and Carnegie. The accident took place after 7 a. m. at Ninth and Carnegie, which establishes the fact that he was then late for work. On cross-examination the plaintiff testified:

“ Q. After the traffic light turned to green, you at no time ever looked to your left for approaching traffic before this accident occurred, did you? A. I looked on the light, it is green.
“Q. Mr. Kish, you have testified twice before about this, haven’t you. In the first trial and in the second trial? A. Yes.
“Q. You at no time after that light turned green ever looked to your left for approaching traffic before this accident occurred, did you? A. I don’t look.
“Q. You didn’t look, did you? A. No.
“Q. So your answer is no ? A. No.
“Q. All right, so you never saw the streetcar before the collision occurred, did you? A. No, I did not see the streetcar.
‘ ‘ Q. All right, when the collision occurred, you were shifting .into second gear, weren’t you? A. Yes.”

The defendant produced as witnesses two passengers and the motorman to give evidence about the facts of the collision. The first witness knew nothing of the occurrence until the automobile hit the streetcar, which point of collision he said was just about at the middle. He said the streetcar was not traveling fast, about 10 to 15 miles per hour, and was halfway across Carnegie Avenue when the accident happened.

The motorman, who had 39 years experience as a transit company motorman, now retired because of illness, said the accident was after 7 a. m.; that he had stopped at Eagle Avenue to take on a passenger; that the place where he stopped was about 200 feet north of Carnegie Avenue; that the light was green when he went into the intersection of East Ninth with Carnegie; and that he was going 10 to 15 miles per hour. He saw cars standing and headed east on the south side of Carnegie Avenue. He tapped his gong. He then looked straight ahead and proceeded until he heard a crash at the rear end of the car, and stopped in 10 feet. "When he stopped, the front of his car was at the south crosswalk of Carnegie Avenue. When he got out, the auto was behind the side doors of the car. He then got in his car and moved it forward, so as not to block Carnegie Avenue traffic.

On cross-examination, he testified that when he stopped at Eagle Avenue, the Carnegie Avenue traffic light was red but turned green as he proceeded forward when he was 200 feet away.

The final witness was a porter employed at a laundry. He was seated on the right side of the streetcar at about the middle of the car. He testified that the traffic light was green when the streetcar got to Carnegie Avenue, and as the streetcar passed through the intersection, the auto started up and hit the side about the middle of the streetcar. The plaintiff, in his brief, charges this witness as being illiterate. If such fact was important to the plaintiff, evidence should have been introduced to support such claim. Without evidence, the plaintiff has no right to make such statement in his brief.

The first claim of error is not well taken. The second defense to plaintiff’s second amended petition charged that the plaintiff’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of his injuries and damage. Such an allegation is, of course, unnecessary but could in no way prejudice the plaintiff. The defendant owes no obligation to establish that he was not negligent, and no pleading is necessary as a basis of establishing negligence on the part of the plaintiff contributing proximately to his own injury or, in other words, to establish contributory negligence. But, even though this be true, thq plaintiff could not be harmed in the slightest by the amendment to the defendant’s answer.

The second claim of error is founded on the giving of defendant’s request to charge before argument, which was as follows:

“Benjamin Kish was required to be in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety while operating his automobile and if you find that such care required him to look to the left for southbound traffic on Ninth Street before entering the intersection and you further find that he failed to so look, then he would be negligent. If you find such negligence directly caused or contributed to cause the collision, then Benjamin Kish cannot recover and your verdict must be for the defendant, the city of Cleveland.”

The defendant is entitled to have the jury instructed upon its theory of the case if there is any evidence to support it. In this case the defendant’s evidence is that its streetcar entered the intersection when the traffic light was green for Ninth Street traffic; that its car then had a legal right to proceed; and that when its streetcar had passed the center of the intersection, the plaintiff ran into the side of such streetcar. The plaintiff’s first witness testified that when he was 25 to 30 feet from the East Ninth-Carnegie intersection the traffic light facing East Ninth Street changed from green to yellow, and that the streetcar proceeded on at 25 miles per hour. It is a matter of common knowledge that at such a wide intersection as that of East Ninth Street and Carnegie Avenue when the caution light is displayed it is displayed for at least three second intervals between the alternate red and green signals. At 25 miles per hour, the streetcar was going 37% feet per second and would have traveled 112.5 feet before the green light would show for Carnegie Avenue traffic. If this evidence of the plaintiff be accepted as true, the streetcar was directly across plaintiff’s path before he had a legal right to proceed. The law is that a plaintiff who leaves a place of safety and drives into a danger which is obvious and directly in front of him and which he could not avoid seeing under the circumstances as testified to by credible witnesses is guilty of negligence, no matter what color the traffic light might be as then displayed. The charge given, as requested by defendant, which stated that, if the jury found under the circumstances that the exercise of ordinary care would require the plaintiff to look to the left, then the failure to do so constituted negligence, stated a correct proposition of law involved in the case, based on the fact situations claimed by the defendant and supported by credible evidence, and was, therefore, properly given. A request to charge before argument does not have to encompass more than one proposition of law applicable to facts presented by the evidence.

It is claimed that this same question was presented to this court in a previous appeal in which this court reversed the trial court for failure to charge contributory negligence and for journalizing its conclusions on that record that no other errors were found in the record. That entry was based on the evidence in that case and not on the evidence as completely detailed above and presented in the trial from which this appeal is taken. We are not called upon to determine nor do we have the means of knowing now what the evidence was in the first appeal or in what respects it differed from that which is now before us. Such claim is not well founded.

A careful analysis of all the evidence by the jury would warrant it to conclude that the streetcar moved across the intersection with at least the protection of the caution light because the plaintiff did not come in contact with it until it had passed all three westbound lanes and until it was across the middle traffic lane for eastbound traffic, the streetcar moving at such a slow speed that it could be stopped within 10 feet; and that the plaintiff, in driving his automobile east on Carnegie Avenue, stopped as required by the traffic signal, proceeding after the light changed to green, from a standing position and moving not over 30 feet before it collided with the middle or rear of the streetcar directly in his view. A verdict for the plaintiff under such circumstances, if established by a fair- analysis of all the evidence, would be against the manifest weight of the evidence. There can be no question that the record clearly discloses substantial justice bas been done tbe plaintiff by tbe verdict of the jury in tbis case, and bis appeal is, therefore, dismissed.

Appeal dismissed.

Kovachy, P. J., and Hurd, J., concur.  