231 Cal. App. 2d 417 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1964
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment following a defense verdict in a personal injury action. The ear in wMch plaintiff was riding was hit by defendant
The accident happened at the intersection of Madison and Manzanita Avenues in Sacramento County. At the point of the accident Madison runs east and west, Manzanita north and south. The point of impact was in the northeast segment of the intersection. The intersection was posted with signs for a four-way stop, but, as regards westbound travel on Madison, it was, as we shall show hereinafter, inadequately posted.
On January 17, 1961, at approximately 9:25 p.m., Mrs. Eose Benner, the driver and owner of the car in which plaintiff was riding, driving north on Manzanita, approached and stopped at the intersection. There were no other ears stopped at the intersection and, although there were others approaching, she “thought that it was safe” (since they were required to stop) and she proceeded on into the intersection.
The night was cloudy and it was dark. There was no street light at the intersection. There were then three service stations on intersection corners. There is evidence that one of them was open and lighted, no evidence regarding the other two.
Defendant was westbound on Madison. He was driving with the left side of his vehicle between 1 and 2 feet from the center line. His speed was between 40 and 45 miles per hour and he slowed down as he approached the intersection. This approach was from around a curve which commences one-tenth of a mile east of the intersection. The curve is to the north. When he was 100 feet back from the intersection he observed the northbound Benner car. It was then stopped at the entrance to the intersection. He had never traveled this highway before and looked to see whether any stop sign directed him also to stop. Observing none, he assumed the Benner car was making a required stop to yield the right of way to westbound Madison Avenue traffic and he continued on. He then noticed the Benner car crossing the intersection in front of him too late to avoid the accident although he applied his brakes and swung to the left in his endeavor to do so. His vehicle laid down 59 feet of skidmarks. The front of his car struck the right side of the Benner car.
There actually was a stop sign directing the stopping of westbound traffic on Madison. However, defendant’s failure to note its existence may be explained. At the point of the intersection Madison Avenue is 90 feet wide with two lanes
We have labored to attempt a word picture of stop sign warning in its relation to travel westbound on Madison on the night of the accident since it is vital to defendant’s contention he was justified in having failed to stop.
The instructions have not been included in the record on appeal but it has been stipulated that the trial court gave B.A.J.I. Instruction No. 149 (1962) Revised. By it the jury was instructed that violation of a statute (Vehicle Code section 22450 having been read) gave rise to a presumption ; that the presumption could be overcome by defendant if he sustained the burden of producing evidence showing that under all the circumstances “the conduct in question was excusable or justifiable”; that to prove excuse or justification to overcome the presumption of negligence ‘ ‘ the evidence must support a finding that the person who violated the statute did
This B.A.J.I. instruction, revised after the decision of our Supreme Court in Alarid v. Vanier (1958) 50 Cal.2d 617 [327 P.2d 897], follows the rule in that case. There the accident occurred when defendant’s recently tested hydraulic foot brakes on a newly acquired used car had suddenly and inexplicably failed. After discussing and discarding former court-applied tests to determine exeusability the court (per Chief Justice Gibson) says (on page 624) : “In our opinion the correct test is whether the person who has violated a statute has sustained the burden of showing that he did what might reasonably be expected of a person of ordinary prudence, acting under similar circumstances, who desired to comply with the law.” The court decided that under the facts of that case described above the defendant had satisfied that burden.
We think the same must be said regarding the facts in the case at bench. Justification or excuse has been said to exist where the party sought to be charged is ignorant nonnegligently of the facts which bring a statute into operation. (Nevis v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., 43 Cal.2d 626, 633 [275 P.2d 761].) In Graf v. Garcia (1953) 117 Cal.App.2d 792, 797 [256 P.2d 995], the court held that a jury was justified in finding excusable a defendant’s failure to see a stop sign far to his right outside the paved portion of a road on a dark misty night.
Here the defendant was traveling along an unknown highway on a dark cloudy winter night. He was unaware of any requirement that he, as a westbound traveler, must stop. On the contrary, seeing Mrs. Benner’s car stopped he assumed that
A motion was made by respondents to dismiss the appeal as frivolous. Pending hearing of the motion we reached the appeal for oral argument and it was then argued and submitted.
The motion to dismiss is denied. The judgment is affirmed.
Friedman, J., and Van Dyke, J.,
Although two defendants, the driver Michael Charles Donohue and Mars Metal Company, sued both as a corporation and a copartnership, were named, reference throughout this opinion is to defendant in the singular and refers to the defendant Donohue, the driver.
Aphotograph in evidence (Dft.’s Ex. “A”) taken at a later date shows highway changes at this intersection which include a stop sign posted at the edge of the main traveled westbound lane buttressed by white posts set in a triangle. These effectually form an island separating westbound travel from that turning right.
Language of the court in Graf, supra, inferred that things "beyond the control” of the person charged must be present to support a finding of exeusability or justification. In Alarid v. Vanier, supra, the Supreme Court stated this to be too rigid a test; substituted that given above.
Retired Presiding Justice of the District Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council