195 P. 1073 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1921
At the close of plaintiff's evidence, defendant's motion for a nonsuit was granted, and from the judgment entered thereon plaintiffs have appealed.
Plaintiffs are heirs of C. M. Carpenter, deceased, who died from injuries alleged to have been sustained as a result of defendant's negligent operation of a railway passenger train which collided with an automobile in which deceased was at the time traveling as a passenger.
It appears that Oak Street, in the city of Bakersfield, extends north and south, crossing at right angles the railway tracks of defendant, which at the time in question was operating a passenger train thereon from the west, while W. C. Gibson, in an automobile in which Carpenter was a passenger, was driving south on said street to a point which required him to cross the railway tracks in reaching the destination to which Carpenter had employed Gibson to take him. Gibson was at the wheel of his car on the left side thereof, and Carpenter was sitting beside him on the west side, from which the train was coming. In approaching the railway from the north on Oak Street the view of the railway tracks until within some thirty feet thereof was at the time more or less obstructed by telegraph poles, a fence, growing vegetation, bushes, and cars standing on a spur-track extending in a northwesterly direction. But upon the automobile reaching a point thirty feet distant from the track the view thereof on the west, from which direction the train came, was unobstructed for a distance of three hundred feet. Covering this distance of thirty feet from the track the automobile was operated at a speed of some four miles per hour, while the train approached the crossing at a speed of some thirty-five or forty miles per hour, and while there was at the crossing a wigwag and bell, they were not operated, nor did the men in charge of the train give any signal or warning of its proximity to the crossing until within a few feet thereof, at which time the front wheels of the automobile had crossed the north rail of the track and, while Gibson was trying to back his car, the engine collided therewith and caused the injuries to Carpenter from which he died.
Upon the evidence offered the jury might very properly have found defendant guilty of negligence in operating its train. Gibson, as owner and driver of the automobile, was *62 familiar with the existence of the crossing, knew that trains were operated over the same at regular intervals, and, conceding that, as claimed by appellants, there was an absence of warning given by defendant's servants of the approach of the train, and that the track could not be seen by one traveling south on Oak Street until within thirty feet thereof, nevertheless it clearly and conclusively appears that when the automobile reached a point thirty feet distant from the track a plain and unobstructed view thereof was afforded for a distance of at least three hundred feet to the west, from which direction the train was coming, and from which point the automobile traveled upgrade to the track at a speed of four miles per hour, during all of which time the approaching train was in plain view. That Gibson neglected the simplest precaution and omitted every duty devolving upon him for the protection of himself and passenger is upon the evidence not open to the slightest question.
[1] We cannot, however, assent to respondent's contention that such gross negligence on the part of Gibson should be imputed to deceased, who had no control over the former or the operation of the car which he occupied merely as a passenger. Indeed, the authorities, in this state at least, are uniformly to the contrary. (Bresee v. Los Angeles Traction Co.,
The judgment is reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on March 10, 1921.
All the Justices concurred, except Shaw, J., and Wilbur, J., who voted for granting of petition. *65