140 Cal. App. 2d 433 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1956
Appeal from a judgment denying relief for injuries assertedly sustained by appellant when she allegedly fell on a defective sidewalk of respondent city and suffered injuries.
On July 18, 1953, about 9 p. m. while walking, “practically like walking a chalk line” on the right hand edge of Lyman Place, appellant stepped her left foot into what she thought was a hole, fell and suffered broken bones in the same pedal extremity. She now demands a reversal of the judgment entered on the verdict on the grounds that (1) the sidewalk at the place of her fall was in a defective condition; (2) the city had knowledge thereof; (3) for a reasonable time after
Appellant is reminded that she had a trial in the forum of her choice. She presented all her evidence to a jury which heard and considered not only hers but also that presented by respondent, and decided that she was not entitled to prevail. The results of such a trial are final where no prejudicial error appears, where there is substantial evidence supporting the verdict, and especially where the trial court has reviewed the record on a motion for new trial and rejected such motion. We cannot overemphasize the important position of the trial court in the judicial system. Its function is to hear and determine controversies of the gravest concern. Its judgments are made upon the hypothesis that all issues of a controversy were raised by the pleadings, were by the judgment settled and that when based upon substantial evidence, it is final.
Despite the universal acceptance of the truth of the foregoing observations, appellant comes now urging here the very evidence she produced in the trial court, makes the same argument she made there and insists that a different judgment should be ordered. She says that “the conclusion is inescapable,
It appears that she was walking south on the east side of Lyman Place, on the right-hand edge of the sidewalk, putting one foot “directly in front of the other . . . and I had just come out of a driveway, so it would be between the driveway and the alley. . . . The second step I took is the step that broke the foot.” [44 inches from the driveway.] By such testimony, the jury could reasonably have found that she could not have been within a foot of the claimed defect [60 inches from the driveway] when she fell and therefore could not have stepped into the “hole” at her second step beyond the driveway.
The jury could have found that she was not wholly free from contributory negligence. As she was walking south, she did not “concentrate on the fact, but there was something about the place that made me go on the outer edge of the walk . . . there was a feeling that I should stay away from that inner edge as I walked, so I walked to the extreme right edge of the sidewalk ... I walked down in the driveway and up out of it ... I was specially looking at the alley.” She had not been particularly looking at the sidewalk and could not remember the last time she had looked at it prior to the fall, but did not look at it after she came out of the driveway. “It was fairly light; it wasn’t a real dark street.”
Thus appellant evidently impressed the jury that if she relied upon her faculties in negotiating the sidewalk, her chief reliance was upon her hunches and her “feeling” in selecting a safe course to pursue and did not intelligently and carefully select a way that might lead her safely to her destination.
The question of fact presented to the jury, to wit, whether there was a dangerous condition on the sidewalk, whether it was the proximate cause of appellant’s injury, whether she contributed any negligence to cause herself to fall, were addressed to the triers of fact, the jury, functioning under the supervision of the trial judge. Inasmuch as the inferences from the evidence adduced fairly support the verdict, this court is powerless to upset the implied findings.
The court committed no prejudicial error. At the trial appellant offered in evidence photostatie copies of “complaint memoranda, filed by citizens with the Department of Public Works,” with the purpose of establishing “that the City had knowledge, both actual and constructive, of a long continued dangerous and defective condition of the sidewalk and it is appellant’s contention that such evidence was material to the jury’s consideration of the veracity of the witness.” The facts are that Mr. O’Leary, foreman of District 7 of the Bureau of Street Maintenance, which includes Lyman Place, testified as to a description of the repair work required in each case. He admitted having signed the “repaired” notations on the dates indicated. It is observed that counsel for appellant admitted that the complaints did not call for re
But conceding, arguendo, an error in rejecting the offer of the photostats, still there was no prejudice for the reason that their contents had been proved by the testimony of Mr. 0 ’Leary.
Judgment affirmed.
Fox, J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
Government Code, section 53050.
(a) “Person” or “public” includes a pupil attending the public schools of any school or high school district.
(b) “Public property” means public street, highway, building, park, grounds, works, or property.
(c) “Local agency” means city, county, or school district.
Government Code, section 53051.
A local agency is liable for injuries to persons and property resulting from the dangerous or defective condition of public property if the legislative body, board, or person authorized to remedy the condition:
(a) Had knowledge or notice of the defective or dangerous condition.
(b) Por a reasonable time after acquiring knowledge or receiving notice, failed to remedy the condition or to take action reasonably necessary to protect the public against the condition.