FLORENCE A. BECK et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents,
v.
JACK KESSLER, Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, First District, Division One.
*333 Bacon, Mundhenk, Stone & O'Brien, Herbert Chamberlin and Jack M. O'Brien for Defendant and Appellant.
Thomas E. Feeney for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
SULLIVAN, P.J.
In this action for damages for personal injuries defendant appeals from an adverse judgment, entered on jury verdicts, in favor of plaintiff Florence A. Beck in the sum of $8,000 and plaintiff Mildred Pratt in the sum of $10,000.
On June 10, 1961, at about 3 a.m. plaintiffs were passengers in a taxicab en route from San Francisco to Daly City. The cab, southbound on Junipero Serra Boulevard, had stopped because of a red traffic control signal at the intersection of 19th Avenue when it was struck in the rear by an automobile driven by defendant. The weather was clear, the streets dry and the intersection well-lighted. On Junipero Serra Boulevard northbound traffic and southbound traffic were separated by a dividing strip or raised curbing. Plaintiffs' taxicab was stopped in the center lane of three southbound traffic lanes. There was no other traffic in the immediate area at the time. After the cab had been stopped in the above position for a few seconds, plaintiffs saw bright lights approaching them from the rear and then felt the sudden impact.
Defendant, called as a witness by plaintiffs under Code of Civil Procedure section 2055, testified that between 10 p.m. and midnight on June 9, 1961, he had a couple of beers at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco. After that he was at a bar for a few hours during which time he had a few more beers. At the time of the accident he was going to his home in South San Francisco. He could not remember whether the intersection was well-lighted or in which traffic lane he was driving. He could see the traffic lights at the intersection but could not recall what their color was at any time during the last half block up to the time of the collision. Nor could he remember whether there were any vehicles in the immediate area other than his own and the cab. He stated that he was driving "about the speed limit ... at the regular speed, 35 miles an hour"; that he was looking through his windshield which was clear; that there was nothing to prevent his seeing the cab; that he just kept driving at the same speed until he *334 was a short distance from the cab when he suddenly applied his brakes; that "As I seen it, I tried to avoid it, and I just grabbed just grabbed the right hand of my car, just grabbed the end of it, and that's how the impact came"; and that the collision occurred with a loud crash, although he believed his car hit only the left corner of the cab "because that's all I I could, if I had to, turn that wheel a little bit more. I probably would have missed him."
At the conclusion of this examination by plaintiffs' counsel,[1] defendant left the stand. There was no redirect examination by defendant's own counsel. After brief testimony on recall of Mrs. Beck, plaintiffs rested. Defendant then rested without offering any evidence in defense. At the close of the evidence, plaintiffs made a motion for directed verdicts on behalf of plaintiffs and against defendant on the issue of liability which the court granted, advising the jury accordingly at that time[2] and subsequently so instructing them.[3]
The sole question which defendant raises on appeal is this: Did the court err in directing a verdict against defendant on the issue of liability? Plaintiffs urge us not to consider the question on the ground that defendant has waived his right to raise it on appeal by failing to object to the motion for a directed verdict and by acquiescing in the court's ruling thereon. [1] However, we are of the view that whatever may have been the antecedent proceedings, defendant's attack is directed at the court's instruction to the jury and that "An erroneous instruction can always be challenged on appeal." (Cummings v. County of Los Angeles (1961)
[2] Applicable here are the following principles set forth in Walters v. Bank of America (1937)
Faced with this settled criterion, defendant claims that his own testimony is susceptible of the inference that he was not acting negligently. He argues that "Time and again the appellate courts of this state have applied and approved the rule that whether the operator of the rear car was negligent in colliding with the car ahead presents a question of fact and not of law" although in fairness it must be noted that at oral argument defendant's counsel stated to us that he did not hold to such thesis in all cases as an absolute rule of law.
[6] The applicable rule is stated by Justice Schauer in Gray v. Brinkerhoff (1953)
[7] It is implicit in the rule stated in Gray v. Brinkerhoff, supra, that whether or not reasonable men can draw but one conclusion of negligence from the evidence depends on the facts and circumstances of the particular case. [8] Generally speaking, the question of negligence as well as of contributory negligence and proximate cause are questions of fact for the determination of the trier of fact (Austin v. Riverside Portland Cement Co. (1955)
Thus in rear-end collision cases this court and other appellate courts have pointed out that whether the driver of the rear car was negligent in colliding with the car in front presents a question of fact rather than of law since it depends upon all the circumstances of the particular case. (Wohlenberg v. Malcewicz (1943)
[9] On the other hand, generally speaking, there is a permissible inference of negligence from the fact of a rear-end collision requiring some explanation or excuse from the driver of the rear car. As we observed in Kramer v. Barnes, supra,
Our task then is to determine whether, as the trial court ruled, the facts of the instant case induce but one conclusion, that of defendant's negligence or, as defendant argues, contain redeeming characteristics to be weighed and balanced by the trier of fact. [11] In so doing we are also cognizant of the rule applied in a number of California cases that "one *338 who does not see that which is clearly visible and would have been seen by one exercising ordinary care, as result of which a collision occurs, is guilty of negligence as a matter of law." (Italics added.) (Huetter v. Andrews (1949)
[12] In the instant case, the evidence on the issue of negligence is not in conflict. The plain facts are that on a clear, dry night and on a well-lighted highway, presenting no involvement of other moving traffic, defendant collided with the taxicab which was lawfully stopped at the intersection and failed to stop his own car in time to avoid the collision. There is no evidence nor any claim that the cab caused the accident either by suddenly coming to a stop or by suddenly being driven into the path of defendant's car. (See Lawson v. Lester, supra,
Our foregoing analysis and conclusion are in harmony with those made in Lawson v. Lester, supra,
Defendant relies on the following cases involving rear-end collisions, some already mentioned by us, where the particular facts were deemed insufficient to establish negligence as a matter of law: Wohlenberg v. Malcewicz, supra,
Finally, defendant invokes the presumption of due care (Code Civ. Proc., § 1963, subd. 4) as a vehicle for providing favorable evidence and thus creating a conflict. He claims that "His testimony discloses that something had eradicated from his memory many of the vital facts leading up to and culminating in the accident."
[13] As the Supreme Court recently pointed out in Brown v. Connolly (1965)
[14] "A requirement for invocation of the presumption in amensia cases is that the loss of memory was induced by brain injury suffered as a result of the accident in question. (Kumelauskas v. Cozzi (1959) supra,
*341 [15] Defendant's argument must fall. There is no evidence that he sustained a "loss of memory induced by brain injury suffered as a result of the accident in question." (Brown v. Connolly, supra.) Indeed, as we read defendant's testimony, there is no claim at all on his part of amnesia in the sense in which that term is used in Brown v. Connolly, supra, and related cases. Additionally, it should be noted that defendant offered no explanation of his conduct while under examination as an adverse witness although the nature of the questions afforded him ample opportunity to do so.
The judgment is affirmed.
Molinari, J., and Sims, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Covering only 13 pages in the reporter's transcript.
[2] The court stated: "There will be no further testimony other than what you have heard. The plaintiffs have made a motion before me for a directed verdict, and which I have granted. In other words, you will receive instructions from me that you are to bring in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant Kessler only for such sum, if any, that you feel either of the plaintiffs is entitled to."
[3] The court included among its instructions to the jury, the following: "Now, as I instructed you, ladies and gentlemen, yesterday afternoon, and as I instruct you again now, you are to bring in a verdict in favor of each of the plaintiffs in this case and in a sum which you feel each of them is entitled. And that is subject to this qualification: that these injuries sustained by these plaintiffs were the proximate cause of [? were proximately caused by] the negligence of the defendant Kessler."
[4] Disapproved on other grounds in Cooke v. Tsipouroglou (1963)
