17 P.2d 1072 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1933
These two actions were brought for damages for injuries sustained in a collision of automobiles. They grew out of the same accident, and for the purposes of trial were consolidated.
A jury trial was had and a verdict of $2,500 was returned in favor of plaintiffs Minnie Garrison and J.D. Garrison against Carl Williams and Gladys Williams, and a verdict of $15,000 in favor of plaintiff Corkery and against defendants Williams, also a verdict in favor of defendant Lee. Judgment was entered for plaintiffs for *600 said respective amounts, and from this judgment defendants Carl Williams and Gladys Williams have appealed.
The undisputed evidence is substantially as follows: Appellants Carl Williams and Gladys Williams are husband and wife. The automobile that was being operated by Carl Williams at the time of the collision was owned by Gladys Williams as her separate property. Her said husband was driving it with her knowledge and permission, but he was on a pleasure trip of his own and was not acting as the agent of his wife. The collision occurred on August 17, 1930, shortly after noon on the state highway, about one-half mile south of its intersection with the road leading to South San Francisco.
Respondent Corkery was traveling north on said highway in a five-passenger sedan, accompanied by his sister Minnie Garrison and another relative of his, as his guests. At the place where the automobiles collided there were four lanes of travel, two being used by the south-bound vehicles and two by the north-bound. Respondents were proceeding northerly on the outer easterly or right-hand lane, and were passed by an automobile going in the same direction driven by defendant Lee, who, after passing, swung back into the lane upon which respondents were traveling. While said Lee was passing respondents' automobile, appellant Carl Williams, who was traveling south on said highway in his wife's automobile, left his lane on the westerly side of the highway and started diagonally across same at a speed of from forty-five to fifty miles an hour, in the face of the oncoming traffic going north thereon; and, having reached the easterly side of the said highway, he first struck the Lee car a glancing blow and then collided with the Corkery automobile which, at the instant of the collision, had come practically to a stop on the extreme easterly edge of the highway.
[1] Section 1714 1/4 of the Civil Code provides in part that: "Every owner of a motor vehicle shall be liable and responsible for the death of or injury to a person or property resulting from negligence in the operation of such motor vehicle, in the business of such owner or otherwise, by any person using or operating the same with the permission, express or implied, of such owner." *601
Appellants contend that this section is unconstitutional, but this contention has been decided adversely to appellants. (O'Neil v. Williams,
[2] Appellants next contend that the trial court erred in holding that the permission given by Gladys Williams to her husband to use her automobile imposed any liability upon her for his negligence while operating it under such permission. This contention has also been held to be without merit. (O'Neil v.Williams, supra.)
[3] Appellants offered no testimony at the trial of this case, but they claim that the law creates a presumption that Carl Williams was traveling at a lawful rate of speed and upon the proper side of the highway at all times, and that this presumption is evidence, and therefore the court erred in directing a verdict against them. That this presumption is evidence and should be submitted to the jury, unless it is dispelled by the testimony of the party in whose behalf this presumption is invoked, seems to be well settled. (Smellie v.Southern Pac. Co.,
In Rogers v. Interstate Transit Co.,
[4] We are of the opinion that even though the court should have submitted the question of Carl Williams' negligence to the jury, instead of directing the jury to return a verdict, yet under the facts of this case there was no miscarriage of justice, as the jury could not have brought in any other verdict.
Appellants further contend that the judgment for $15,000 in favor of respondent Corkery is void as being in excess of that provided by law in cases under section 1714 1/4 of the Civil Code. This section provides that for the death of or injury to one person the amount recoverable is limited to $5,000 to one person in any one accident, and to $10,000 where more than one person is injured. After this appeal had been taken, the trial court made a nunc pro tunc order amending the said judgment against Gladys Williams in favor of respondent Corkery, by reducing and limiting it to $5,000. This correction was made upon the ground that the clerk of said court had inadvertently entered the judgment for $15,000 instead of $5,000. Appellants contend that this action of the trial court was erroneous in that the lower court had lost jurisdiction of the action by virtue of the appeal.
In Lauchere v. Lambert,
[7] We find no merit in the claim of appellants that respondents should first have exhausted their remedy against the operator of the automobile before proceeding against the owner, nor that the husband of Minnie Garrison cannot recover from the owner the loss sustained by him arising out of the injury sustained by his wife by reason of the said accident. The judgment as modified is affirmed; each party to pay his own costs on this appeal.
Knight, Acting P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred. *604