This is an appeal from a judgment entered after a verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of twelve thousand dollars damages, for personal injuries, alleged to have been sustained by respondent, as the result of a collision between a horse, then being ridden by respondent, and an automobile, being operated by appellant Stowe, an employee of the appellant, Mt. Diablo Scenic Boulevard Company.
Appellants’ main contention is that the evidence submitted in the court below was insufficient to sustain the verdict against them, but, in fact, affirmatively shows to the contrary. Counsel for appellants have printed in their brief, and in the supplement appended thereto, those portions of the evidence upon which they rely as supporting their position. Respondent insists that the opening brief of appellants should not be considered, claiming that only such extracts from the
*792
evidence are quoted as tend to support the views of the appellants, disregarding the testimony which conflicts therewith. An inspection of the brief convinces us that in a number of instances this is apparently true. Therefore, as was pointed out by the court in
McKinnell
v.
Hansen,
*793
Plaintiff, who is a skillful rider and an experienced stock-man, and known as such to appellant Stowe, was riding a young horse he was engaged in breaking on the highway between Danville and Mt. Diablo Park. The horse became frightened at a passing motorcycle, began rearing and bucking, and attempted to jump over the fence on the side of the highway. One of plaintiff’s chap are jos caught on the barbed wire, which threw his foot out of the stirrup. While the plaintiff was engaged in subduing the horse an automobile approached, the occupants of which called to him. As it passed he saw the automobile, driven by appellant Stowe, coming from the other direction, “driving pretty fast,” as far as plaintiff’s knowledge of automobiles allowed him to judge. The horse, as described by plaintiff, was then “frightened and mad. . . . The horse shied agin the fence and I dug him back again . . . then he lunged, tried to get out of my hold, you see, as a horse will do, and when he was about in the center of the road . . . the horse was still rearing and lunging, and I saw the other machine [driven by Stowe], and I thought the horse would go past him, or past my own side of the road. At that time the horse just reared and the next thing I heard was glass flying, and my lights was out, like that.” Plaintiff, upon cross-examination, testified that, as the automobile, driven by appellant Stowe, was approaching, his horse continued beyond his control to such an extent that while he could prevent it from running away, he could not otherwise direct its movements other than to allow it to rear and plunge. That such was the fact is fully corroborated by the testimony of other witnesses.
Appellant Stowe, by his own testimony, admittedly saw respondent before he, Stowe, met and passed the automobile which was going in the opposite direction. That distance was variously estimated from one hundred to two hundred feet. *794 There was nothing to prevent his having a clear and unobstructed view of the horse and the rider from that time until the collision occurred. After the other automobile passed the horse, Stowe observed, so he testified, that it was “frightened, jumping around, and crowding over toward the fence.” Prom that moment, he contends, he did not see the horse, although he admitted that he knew the horse was there. According to his testimony, when he met the other automobile, he was going twenty miles an hour, and then “unconsciously slackened down to about eighteen,” as the two machines passed. He made no effort to stop his car until after the collision. Prom the evidence, somewhat uncertain by reason of the references to the diagram of the scene of the accident, used at the trial, and which is not a part of the record, it appears that Stowe turned neither to the right nor to the left, in order to avoid the plaintiff’s bucking horse. The collision took place on the edge of the strip of macadam which was in the center of the roadway, which, in turn, was forty-two feet wide between fences. The plaintiff was thrown from his horse and suffered very serious injuries, the gravity of which are not disputed by appellant, and for which the jury awarded the large amount of damages already alluded to.
It is appellant’s contention that the case at issue is governed entirely by statutory law, as found in the act regulating the use and operation of vehicles upon public highways. (Stats. 1915, p. 397.) Pertinent portions thereof are, according to appellant, section 20, paragraph “a,” which requires that the driver or operatior of any vehicle,, in or upon any public highway, shall drive and operate such vehicle in a careful manner with due regard for the safety and convenience of pedestrians and of all other vehicles or traffic upon such highway, “and wherever practicable, shall travel on the right-hand side of such highway”; and section 20, paragraph “h,” which requires that “every person having control or charge of any motor vehicle or other vehicle upon any public highway, and approaching any vehicle drawn by a horse or horses, or any horse upon which any person is riding, shall operate, manage and control such motor vehicle or other vehicle in such manner as to exercise every reasonable precaution to prevent the frightening of any such horse or horses, and to insure the safety and protection of any person riding or driving the game; and if such horse or horses appear frightened the per *795 son in control of such motor vehicle or other vehicle shall reduce its speed, and if requested by signal or otherwise by the driver or rider of such horse or horses shall not proceed further toward such animal or animals unless such movement be necessary to avoid accident or injury, until such animal or animals be under the control of the driver or rider thereof.”
There is no merit in the contention that appellant Stowe was relieved from negligence in the matter because of the fact that plaintiff, busily engaged, as he was, in subduing a frightened, bucking horse, did not signal him to stop as he approached. By his own testimony Stowe was not looking for a signal, because he “didn’t feel that he [plaintiff] had his hands full with the horse,” and “he [plaintiff] was the last man in the world to signal anybody to stop if his horse was unmanageable.”
Appellants contend, therefore, that under this provision the question whether or not under the given set of circumstances it was the duty of Stowe to stop his machine, in order to avoid the accident, was one to he answered by him, in the exercise of reasonable discretion, and failure to stop can be determined to be negligence only in the event of a clear showing of an abuse of such discretion. They quote, in support of this contention, Babbitt on “The Law Applied to Motor Vehicles” (second edition), section 1122, viz.:
“Under the language of the act, in some of the states the vehicle is required to remain stationary, ‘unless forward movement be necessary to avoid accident or injury.’ In such cases it has been held that it is for the chauffeur to determine whether such movement is necessary. His conclusion is controlling, unless he acts unreasonably or in bad faith, and will not be open to question afterward.”
An examination of the two authorities cited by the learned author of the work in question does not warrant an unqualified application of his language to the case at bar. In
McCummins
v.
State,
What appears to us to be a correct statement of the law in such cases is to -be found in
Webb
v.
Moore,
[7] “ It is manifest that in cases like this no fixed standard of care can be laid down as a matter of law, nor can it be said what conduct will amount to negligence; and so the only rule that we can safely apply, when the facts authorize the submission of the ease to a jury, is to leave it to them to determine from all the facts and circumstances whether or not the driver of the automobile exercised or failed to exercise ordinary care to avoid the accident, and whether or not the injured party observed due care. The legal measure of duty is the same upon both of the parties. Each must act with reasonable care to avoid an accident or collision. In some cases this degree of care as to the operator might require the machine to be stopped upon the first evidence of danger; in others it might be necessary to slow down the speed, and yet again, it might be more prudent to proceed at a high rate of speed, or not lessen the speed at which the machine is running. Each ease presents different conditions and situations. What would be ordinary care in one case might be negligence in another. But, whatever the condition or situation, the driver of the automobile must, at all times and in all places, observe ordinary care to avoid injury to persons or travelers on the highway.”
The judgment is affirmed.
Kerrigan, J., and Richards, J., concurred.
