107 P. 317 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1909
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *209 Action brought by heirs of a deceased person to recover damages for her death alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant's employees in operating one of its street-cars. Judgment was for plaintiffs for $2,000, and defendant appeals from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial.
Plaintiffs are the husband and children, respectively, of Hideno Fujise, who, while riding in an express wagon on Central avenue in the city of Los Angeles, was thrown from the wagon by a collision between it and one of the defendant's street-cars, which was operated upon a track along said street or avenue. The car approached and overtook the wagon from the rear. At the point where the collision occurred market wagons were ranged along either side of the street, engaged in loading with produce, and for this purpose were backed against the curb so that the heads of the horses extended out into the street, and the teams and wagons together occupied a large portion of the roadway between the curb and defendant's double tracks along the middle of the street.
The errors upon which appellant relies for a reversal of the judgment are: That the court erred in refusing to enter up judgment in its favor on the special verdict because it appeared therefrom that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence; in refusing to submit to the jury certain special interrogatories requested by the defendant; and in giving and refusing to give certain instructions. It is also contended that the evidence fails to show negligence upon defendant's part and does show contributory negligence upon the part of decedent and the driver of the express wagon. *210 Plaintiffs' cause of action rests upon the view that at all times after the motorman sounded his gong and the driver of the wagon discovered that he was in the way of the car, it was impossible for him to turn out at the right side, and that, as soon as he found he would not be able to reach a place at which he could do this before the car overtook him, he attempted to turn off to the left and the wagon was struck. The driver, S. Igarashi, testified as follows: "I am in the express business for everybody who hires me. On the eighth day of August, 1907, I was taking Mrs. Fujise and her children to the train; I was driving a single wagon of ordinary size. . . . I was driving toward the south on the south side, on the right-hand side. The car came from behind in the rear. When I first saw the car it was about one hundred and fifty feet in the rear. I tried to turn on the right-hand side but found so many wagons that I could not do that, and I turned on the left. The car hit the wagon pretty hard. It hit the rear of the wagon. When the car struck the wagon the position of Mrs. Fujise was turned, you know, turned like this [indicating], and then on that moment she was knocked down on the ground; she afterward died. . . . When the car struck the wagon Mrs. Fujise was sitting on the left and that boy [her little boy] was sitting on the right." On cross-examina-tion he testified: That the wheel which was struck was the one at the left side of the wagon in the rear, and that he heard the bell and looked back and saw the car. It was running pretty fast. The testimony of the other witnesses for plaintiffs sustained that of the driver of the wagon in substantially every particular.
The motorman's testimony discloses the defendant's theory of the accident. He said: "My car was going south on Central avenue. I saw this wagon driving ahead of me. It was on my track. The car would have hit it, if it had overtaken it. When I first noticed it . . . the wagon was quite a ways up. I came up close to the wagon. When I got to what I thought a proper distance I began sounding my gong, sounded it quite often and threw off the power. I slowed my car down. . . . I rang my gong and applied my brakes. . . . The wagon pulled off to the right. I judged that it was clear of the track. There were a few wagons there on that side, not many. When he pulled off, I fed up again, expecting to go *211 by, expecting him to give me the right of way. If he had stayed where he was, I would certainly have gone by, I am sure of that. When he pulled off down quite a ways he came up to where there was another team backed up against the curb. I supposed he was going to give me the right of way, but he pulled his horse in a diagonal angle across my track. . . . When I saw him pull his horse's head toward the track I throwed off again. . . . When he turned off [the first time] I fed up to five points [half speed]. . . . I never had it at more than five points along there. When I saw him turn [to the left] I throwed off the power and put on the air. There was nothing else I could have done to stop. . . . I did everything I could as soon as I saw him turn. My car ran about three feet ahead after it hit the wagon; I then backed up. It did not do any damage to the wagon. Right-hand side of the fender hit the left-hind wheel, between the felloe and the hub." As the testimony of the driver of the express wagon was corroborated by a number of witnesses who were standing near the scene on the ground, so that of the motorman was corroborated by quite a number of persons who were on the car, by all the passengers who testified at the trial, and it must be conceded that if their testimony had been believed by the jury, they would have found that the wagon was safe and clear from interfering with the car while on the right-hand side of the track, and that the motorman exercised due care in the management of his car when the wagon was turned suddenly across the track.
Defendant requested the trial judge to submit to the jury twenty-seven special issues or questions, numbered consecutively from 1 to 21, and 2a, 14a, 14b, 14c, 14d, and 14e. The request was granted as to Nos. 1, 12, 13, 14, 14b and 14d, and denied as to the others. The failure to give all of these was excepted to by appellant, who also contends that the answers given to questions 14 and 14b which were submitted entitle it to judgment on the verdict. These two questions were addressed to matters relating to the issue of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.
In order that contributory negligence shall prevent the recovery of damages for a personal injury, it must appear that the negligence is that of the injured person or of someone over whom he exercised some control. The foundation of the *212
doctrine is said to rest in the civil law maxim: "The harm I bring upon myself I must bear myself." (1 Beven on Negligence in Law, p. 149.) The reason for the rule which so relieves the defendant from the payment of damages for his negligence where the plaintiff has contributed to the injury by his own negligence, as it is applied in this state, is based upon an argument of convenience, to wit, the impossibility of successfully apportioning the damages between the parties, and not for the reason that the law relieves the defendant from responsibility merely because the injured party has contributed to the result by his own negligence or wrongful act. (Needham v. San Francisco,
It cannot be said in this case, as a matter of law, that the failure of the deceased to look to ascertain the position of the car "before turning across the track," as found in answer to special interrogatory No. 14, was contributory negligence. As said by the Washington court in the case of Wilson v. PugetSound Co.,
We do not regard the analogy between a request for instructions and a request for the submission of special interrogatories so close as to justify the application to the latter of a rule of practice adopted in connection with the former. Neither does the reason underlying the general rule of practice relating to the time for presenting instructions appear to us to apply with the same force to the matter of requesting special issues to be submitted. While we agree with respondents' position that this is a matter resting largely in the discretion of the trial judge where there is neither rule of practice nor statute relating to it, we are not prepared to say that under the circumstances of this case the trial judge was justified in refusing to submit these issues solely upon the ground that the request for submission was not made in time. It has been held that in the matter of presenting instructions for the jury where there is no rule in regard to the matter a party would have a right to submit his instructions at any time before the jury leaves the box. (People v. Williams,
The special findings which the parties were entitled to have made by the jury under the provisions of section
The questions which the court refused to give were intended to elicit from the jury findings of fact relating to the care exercised by the motorman; No. 2 related to his sounding the bell and slowing down his car upon approaching the wagon. There was no conflict in the evidence as to the ringing of the bell, the driver admitting that he heard the gong, and there was no denial of the motorman's statement that he slowed down his car. No. 3 asked at what speed the car was moving when the motorman first noticed the wagon. There was no substantial conflict in the evidence as to this. No. 4 inquired whether or not the driver of the wagon turned off the track to the right when the car approached. If the answer to this had been that "he did," then No. 5 was a request that the jury find whether he drove far enough to one side of the track to enable the car to pass without striking the wagon. If the answers to the last two questions justified the motorman in passing the wagon, then No. 6 requested the jury to answer whether he increased the speed of the car. Again, if the preceding question had been so answered that it might be assumed that the wagon passed far enough to the right to escape the car, No. 7 asked: "Did the motorman suppose that he would be given the right of way and allowed to pass the wagon?" Presupposing all these matters except the last to be answered in accordance with defendant's theory, No. 8 inquired, "Did the motorman sound his gong to give warning of the fact that he was about to pass said wagon?" No. 9, presupposing the same answers to the preceding questions, asked: "Was the said wagon turned back across the defendant's said track in such close proximity to the defendant's car that a collision could not have been avoided?" Based upon the assumption that all the preceding matters had been found in accordance with the evidence *216 on behalf of defendant, No. 16 inquired, "State whether the motorman in charge of the defendant's car threw off his current and reversed his car and applied his brakes and tried to stop the same." Taken with the context, that is, with the series of questions and answers preceding them successively, we are of opinion that all of these questions were so framed as to admit of a plain and direct answer. While the answer to two or three of them taken alone might be immaterial, yet if the whole series had been answered in favor of defendant, it is apparent that such answers would have been inconsistent with a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Considered together, they cover the entire defense of the defendant upon the issue of its own negligence. If all of these questions had been answered favorable to the defendant, and such answers were sustained by uncontradicted evidence, then the defense of "no negligence" would have been established as a matter of law. This rule is declared in substance by instruction Xa, as given by the trial court.
The sum of the adjudicated cases bearing upon the relative rights of street-cars and citizens traveling in vehicles drawn by horses or other animals is that both have a right to use the street, but neither has the exclusive right. The motorman of a street-car is not necessarily obliged to stop his car when he sees a man driving in a vehicle along the line of a railway ahead of the car; but he may continue to run the car in a proper manner until he is conscious of the fact that the driver is unaware or heedless of his danger. When he is thus conscious, it is his duty to use all reasonable care and diligence to avoid running the car into the vehicle. Seeing a man driving along the track, the motorman may assume that he will turn aside and out of the way of the car, but he cannot rest on the assumption so long as to allow his car to reach a point where it will be impossible for him to control his car or give warning in time to prevent injury to the man or vehicle. (Galveston City R. R. Co. v. Hewitt,
While of the opinion that the defendant had a right to have the special interrogatories mentioned submitted to the jury, and the failure to do so was error, yet the inferences from the law and record leading to this conclusion do not necessarily sustain appellant's further contention that uncontradicted evidence establishes the defense of no negligence. To reach this conclusion it would be necessary for us to pass upon the weight of the evidence for the respective parties, and this an appellate court will not do.
The refusal of the trial court to give the other special interrogatories, which were addressed to the matter of the contributory negligence or want of care upon the part of the deceased and the driver, has not been especially urged, and so this matter is not passed upon, but if any interrogatories of this kind are presented upon a new trial being had, it is important that they be addressed to the want of care peculiar to the facts of the case and conform to the doctrine of imputed negligence as hereinabove declared.
The giving of instruction No. XIII, if given in the form in which it appears in the record, could not have prejudiced the defendant in any manner, but it is apparent from the language of the instruction itself that it was not given to the jury as printed. The absence of intelligent meaning justifies us in assuming that the learned judge who tried the cause never delivered to the jury such a medley of words, and so we accept the corrected version given by the respondents in their brief as the true instruction delivered. This was not erroneous.
Instruction III, requested by the defendant, correctly declared the law in accordance with the authorities heretofore cited in discussing the right of the defendant to have certain special interrogatories submitted to the jury. If the jury believed the statement of the motorman, then their verdict *218 should have been for defendant, and instruction III is but a request that the law to this effect be given. Instruction VIII, requested by defendant, was but a repetition of III in a more succinct form. One only need have been given. The same legal propositions were practically covered by two instructions given by the court, but they were stated from the viewpoint of the plaintiff and lacked the directness of statement of defendant's theory that was shown in the instructions refused. While the judgment would not be reversed for this reason alone, we are of opinion that the defendant was entitled to have had one or the other of these instructions given to the jury.
There was no error in the instructions of the trial judge in respect to contributory negligence which was to defendant's prejudice. These instructions were more favorable to the defendant than they should have been. The trial court framed its instructions in this respect upon the theory that the negligence of the driver was to be imputed to the deceased. Being a public expressman, driving the deceased along an indicated route to a fixed place to which she directed him to go (the train), she did not exercise such control over him that his negligence could be imputed to her. (Little v. Hackett,
Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
Allen, P. J., and Shaw, 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 February 14, 1910. *219