Plaintiff appeals from an adverse judgment, rendered against her on a jury verdict, in her action to recover for personal injuries. At the trial in the superior court issue was joined both on the question of defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence. A hearing was granted by this court, after decision by the District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division Two, for the purpose of giving further study to the problems presented. After such study we have concluded that the opinion of the District Court of Appeal, prepared by Mr. Justice Goodell, correctly treats and disposes of the issues involved, and it is therefore, with certain further discussion pertinent to contentions urged before us, adopted as and for the opinion of this court. Such . opinion (with appropriate deletions and additions as indicated) is as follows:
“[ ] On Sunday evening, July 7, 1946, about 8:30, appellant, a woman of 70, was a passenger on a Key System bus traveling easterly on San Jose Avenue in Alameda. She signalled for a stop at Para Street and the bus stopped at the southwest #orner of the two streets with its front door a short distance westerly of the north-and-south crosswalk. The night was dark and the intersection was but dimly lighted. As appellant left the bus by its front door she stepped into the gutter, which was about 8 inches deep, its bottom paved with cobblestones; it was rough and uneven and contained debris, rocks and pebbles. She lost her balance and fell against the curb before getting a foothold on the sidewalk, and fractured her left hip. When the bus stopped it was inclined toward the sidewalk, on an angle, which left the appellant very little room, and put her in fear of being struck by it when it started up. Appellant was found lying where she fell, by a police officer, who had to use the spotlight on his car to make sure a human being was lying there.
“Appellant’s principal contention is that the court erred *67 in excluding the testimony of two witnesses as to the customary stopping place of the buses.
“At San Jose Avenue and Paru Street the crosswalk is flush with the sidewalk so that a pedestrian crossing the avenue would not have to step up or down at a curb and over a gutter, but would keep walking along on the same plane as the sidewalk, which situation appears clearly in three photographs in evidence. The gutter into which appellant stepped was at the opening of the culvert which runs under the crosswalk.
“The two witnesses testified that the customary bus stops were within the area of the crosswalk, which the witnesses marked on the photographs. It is evident that had the bus stopped at any of the accustomed places within the flat area as they portrayed them, appellant would have stepped onto the crosswalk and not into the gutter as she did.
“Testimony of both witnesses was stricken out on defendant’s motion, which left the record as if it had been rejected in the first place. Appellant’s counsel in urging its retention assured the court that Mrs. Fowler would testify ‘that it was the place where the bus always stopped to permit her to alight in the past,’ 1 and that he had ‘under subpoena several witnesses to testify in addition to the two already, that use that bus regularly, that that is the regular place . . .’
“Appellant does not contend that the failure to stop at the accustomed place on this occasion was negligence per se, but she does contend that ‘The custom of the bus in stopping regularly at a particular place on the route, the place at which the plaintiff expected to alight and at which she thought she was alighting, was brought into the trial as one of the elements necessary to show the defendant’s negligence in this particular case.’ She contends further that she ‘was entitled to show the custom of this respondent as establishing a standard of safety in this case and this case only, and her reliance upon that standard so adopted by respondent itself. ’
“In
Ross
v.
San Francisco etc. Railways Co.
[1920],
‘1 There can be no doubt that evidence of custom is ordinarily admissible in negligence cases. Cases so holding are
Hennesey
v.
Bingham,
[1899],
“The evidence rejected in this case was not that of a general custom, but of respondent’s own custom and practice, such as that spoken of in Ross v. San Francisco etc. Railways Co., supra.
“In
Adamson
v.
San Francisco
[1924],
“ From these and other authorities it is settled law that evidence of custom is admissible for its bearing on either-negligence or contributory negligence.
“Respondents pleaded that plaintiff failed to ‘exercise ordinary care and caution in conducting herself so as to avoid the alleged accident’ and that it was ‘directly and proximately caused by the contributory negligence of said plaintiff.’ Contributory negligence thus became an important issue in the case, and if the evidence of custom bore on that issue it should have been admitted for that reason if for no other.
*69
“In
Scott
v.
Gallot
[1943],
supra,
“In
Muir
v.
Cheney Bros.
[1944],
“Respondents attempt to justify the court’s ruling by invoking the familiar rule that ‘ Custom cannot overcome unequivocal statutory provisions. ’ The basis for this is the provision of section 586, Vehicle Code, that ‘No person shall stop . . . any vehicle ... on a crosswalk. ’ Of the five California cases they cite on this point only one is a negligence case. None of them is in point since appellant had no such purpose as those cases disclose. In
Hurtel
v.
Albert Cohn, Inc.
[1936],
“The excluded evidence was not offered for the purpose of opposing custom to statute law. Appellant had not disobeyed any law and was not seeking to excuse any violation by invoking custom.
“The evidence might have shown repeated violations of section 586 but they were not appellant’s violations. If *70 respondent railway habitually stops its buses in the crosswalk, that is a matter between it and the law enforcement authorities, and appellant is concerned therein only insofar as such stops tend to establish the bus line’s own standard of safety for its passengers, and insofar as such stops had afforded appellant a safe place to alight.
“Appellant is no more affected or concerned with the violations of section 586 than was the passenger-plaintiff in
Clarkson
v.
United Railroads
[1924],
“By relying on section 586 respondents in effect say to appellant: ‘In giving you in the past a safe place to alight we violated § 586, but you are now foreclosed from proving our custom for the very reason that we were transgressors. ’ Respondents are thus taking advantage of their own violations of law (Civ. Code, § 3517;
Hedlund
v.
Sutter Medical Service Co.
[1942],
“The precise question is, whether evidence of a custom which violates positive law is to be rejected for that reason alone, or whether it is nevertheless admissible if it bears on negligence or contributory negligence. Neither side has produced any California authority on precisely this problem. There are, however, cases in other jurisdictions directly in point, the leading one of which seems to be
Langner
v.
Caviness
(1947),
“The court then cites
inter alia Mann
v.
Standard Oil Co.
[1935],
“Langner
v.
Caviness
cites authorities from several other states, and at
“Respondents cite
Glaum
v.
Cummings,
decided by the Illinois Appellate Court, and have supplied the full text of the opinion. It is unreported but the syllabi are found in 317 Ill-App. 655 [
“The case, while similar, is not in point since Glaum’s contributory negligence was so flagrant that the court took the case away from the jury. Hence the rule just discussed was not brought into play, and probably not even considered. What the court said respecting custom is no different from what our California courts have said, and none of the three cases cited in the Glaum opinion is a tort case. [ ].”
Here it is true, as suggested by defendant, that the evidence in question tended to show repeated violations of the law by *73 defendant, and that none of those violations contributed directly to plaintiff’s injury. But, as appears from the foregoing discussion, the evidence was material not because it tended to show violations of the law but because it tended to show a custom established by defendant and a right of plaintiff, who was familiar with the custom, to rely upon its continuance. Such evidence does not become inadmissible because it also tends to show violations of the law. It is self evident that it would be helpful for the triers of fact in determining whether defendant was negligent and whether plaintiff was contributively negligent to consider the facts (if so found) that defendant had established a custom of stopping at the crosswalk, that plaintiff as a regular passenger had become familiar with the custom, that defendant by its conduct had encouraged plaintiff to rely upon the custom, that plaintiff did rely upon it and that on a dark night, without warning to plaintiff, defendant departed from such custom. Upon the record the rejection of the evidence in question was prejudicial error.
Defendant urges, in reliance upon
Tharp
v.
San Joaquin Cotton Oil Co.
(1938),
The question of the admissibility of such evidence to prove negligence of the defendant without pleading the custom need not arise, and other claimed errors need not occur, on a new trial and therefore need not be considered here.
Plaintiff has also attempted to appeal from an order denying her motion for a new trial. Such order is not appealable, and the attempted appeal therefrom will be dismissed. (See
Reeves
v.
Reeves
(1949),
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial; the attempted appeal from the order denying a new trial is dismissed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition' for a rehearing was denied May 28, 1951.
Notes
Thus showing plaintiff-appellant’s knowledge of the custom she sought to prove.
