89 P. 1109 | Cal. | 1907
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him. Plaintiff was riding on a bicycle along a street in the city of Los Angeles, when he was overtaken and struck by an electric car operated by the defendant. The verdict was in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff appeals from the judgment upon this verdict and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The only points made by appellant are that the court erred in giving two instructions to the jury, and in refusing to give a third one upon the request of the plaintiff.
1. Complaint is made of the following instruction given by the court: "The tracks of a street-railway company are in themselves a sign of danger, and one riding along or *778
between the tracks of a street-railway company must exercise his faculties of sight and hearing to watch and listen for cars going in either direction; and if by exercising his sight and hearing,he could see or hear the car approaching either in front orbehind him and he fails to see or hear such car and is injuredthereby, and his failure to see or to hear the car contributes inthe slightest degree or in any manner whatever directly orproximately to the collision between himself and the car, then Icharge you that he cannot recover for any injuries he may sustainby such a collision." No particular criticism is directed against the first part of the instruction. The contention is that the italicized portion is erroneous, in that it requires one riding along or between the tracks of a street-railroad company to exercise more than reasonable care to avoid injury, and debars him from recovery if it was at all possible for him, under any circumstances, to have seen or heard an approaching car. In other words, the instruction in effect requires one upon the track to maintain a constant watch in every direction, and declares that if, by maintaining such watch, and at the same time using his faculty of hearing, he could have seen or heard an approaching car in time to avoid a collision, his failure to see or hear it is, as a matter of law, negligence. As a statement of an abstract legal proposition we think this instruction laid down too stringent a rule, as applied to the conduct of persons proceeding along a street-railroad track. Generally, whether a party has been negligent is a question of fact depending upon a consideration of all the circumstances surrounding the case. And this, like other questions of fact, is to be determined by the jury under proper instructions from the court. "The rule is, that negligence is a question of fact for the jury, even when there is no conflict in the evidence, if different conclusions can be rationally drawn from the evidence." (Herbert v. Southern PacificCo.,
The situation as to street railroads differs so materially that the same rule should not be applied to one proceeding along the streets of a city upon or in proximity to the tracks of a street-railroad company operating thereon. From the very nature of the operation of steam railroads, it is not to be expected that a train of great weight and propelled at a high rate of speed can be readily stopped in order to avoid collision with persons who may be upon its tracks. It is essential that any one seeking to use the space occupied by the tracks should give way to trains operated thereon. But in the case of street railroads in cities, the use of the streets must to a certain extent be common to both the street-railroad company and other persons having occasion to use the streets. (Bailey v. Market-StreetCable Ry. Co.,
But it is urged that the contrary has been definitely decided by this court in Everett v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co.,
In the Everett case the court was not dealing with the correctness of an instruction purporting to declare a rule of law for the guidance of a jury. It was passing upon the question whether, on the undisputed facts shown by the evidence, it appeared so clearly that the person injured had taken no precautions whatever to insure his own safety that it could be said, as matter of law, that he had been guilty of negligence. In answering this question in the affirmative, language was used which, while it was appropriate enough to the discussion of the particular facts presented, should not be taken as declaring a rule of law applicable to the cases of all persons proceeding along the tracks of a street-railway company. This is pointed out in Clark v. Bennett,
But in the case at bar, the fact that the instruction complained of went beyond the proper limits was not prejudicial to the appellant, for the reason that under any view of the *782
law, the undisputed evidence showed his conduct to be so lacking in every element of proper care for his own safety that the court would have been bound to set aside any verdict based upon a finding that he had not been guilty of contributory negligence. According to plaintiff's own testimony, he mounted his bicycle on Pasadena Avenue, and started in a southerly direction along said avenue. He was riding either upon the westerly track or between the two tracks of the defendant, when a car of the defendant came up behind him and struck him, inflicting the injuries complained of. He did not remember anything that occurred after he started to ride. The accident occurred in the daytime. A witness called by plaintiff testified — and this is not contradicted by any one — that plaintiff rode about a block and a half along the track before he was struck. There was ample room for him to ride on the street outside of the track. At the place where the accident occurred the track was straight. As has been stated, plaintiff was riding a bicycle, which, as he himself said, is "a very easy thing to turn from one point to another." All the evidence in the case, the plaintiff's as well as that introduced by the defendant, shows that the plaintiff was not aware of the approaching car till it was practically upon him. His health and hearing were good. Under these circumstances it is perfectly plain that his failure to see or hear the car must have been the result of absolute inattention to his situation and surroundings, and that he exercised no care whatever. To this phase of the case the decision in Everett v. Los Angeles Ry. Co.,
It is further urged that the instruction quoted is erroneous for the reason that it deprives plaintiff of the right to recover, even though the defendant may have failed to avail itself of an opportunity to avoid the injury after having discovered the dangers of the position in which the plaintiff was. But the instructions given by the court are to be taken as a whole. The jury was fully instructed as to the law of the "last clear chance" doctrine, and the charge, read in its entirety, could not have failed to convey a full understanding of the rights of the plaintiff in this regard, if indeed the facts of the case were such as to make this doctrine applicable. (Everett
v. Los Angeles Ry. Co.,
2. The appellant also claims that the court erred in giving the following charge: "If you find from the evidence that the motorman in charge of defendant's car, when about a block away from the point of the accident, saw the plaintiff riding upon his bicycle between the inner rails of the defendant's east-and-west tracks, and far enough away from the track on which he was propelling his car so that his said car could have passed the said plaintiff safely and that he gave warning of his approach and that the front of his car did pass the plaintiff and that the plaintiff then, either through excitement or otherwise, lost his balance, veered in towards the car and that the hind step of said car struck plaintiff *784 and that the said car was traveling upon a straight track at the time of the accident, then I charge you gentlemen, that your verdict must be for the defendant." There was evidence in the record which, if believed by the jury, sustained each element of the hypothesis stated in this instruction, and, if the facts were found by the jury to be as stated, it is perfectly clear that the injury sustained was not the result of any fault of the defendant. While it is generally the better practice to merely instruct the jury as to the governing rules of law, rather than to attempt to apply these rules concretely to the various complicated states of facts that may be contended for by the respective parties, there was no error in the instruction given, and the appellant cannot have been prejudiced by it.
3. The third point relied on by the appellant is that the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction requested by him: "The court instructs the jury that if there is no evidence to the contrary, the law presumes that the plaintiff looked and listened to ascertain whether a car was approaching him from the rear, before getting upon the defendant's street-car track, if they believe from the evidence that he did get upon said track." It is not necessary to decide in this case whether there is or is not any such presumption of law. The instruction in question was properly refused because it had no application to the facts of the case here presented. All of the evidence shows that the plaintiff had been riding along or upon the track (in whichever position he was) for a block and a half before he was struck by the defendant's car. The only material question is whether he was guilty of negligence at the time of the injury. Whether he had exercised due care at the time he started to ride along the street, a block and a half back of the point of collision, is of no consequence in determining whether he was exercising due care at the time the car struck him.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred. *785