262 P. 770 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
The plaintiff had judgment against the defendant in the sum of $10,000 for personal injuries suffered in a collision between a Ford coupe in which the plaintiff was riding and one of the stages belonging to the defendant. No question is presented as to the amount of damages. The record shows that the plaintiff was seriously injured and left a cripple for life. The facts disclosed by the testimony are as follows: On the twenty-first day of April, 1924, the plaintiff was riding in a Ford coupe with Thomas E. Bradley and Mrs. Eleanor Bradley. The Ford coupe had but one seat and all three persons just named were seated thereon, the plaintiff being to the right. The Ford coupe was owned by Mr. Bradley and was being driven in a westerly direction on that certain street known as and called Industrial Street in the city of Los Angeles. At approximately the same time a stage belonging to the defendant corporation was being driven in a southerly direction on a certain other street in the city of Los Angeles known as and called Mill Street, the two streets just named intersecting each other. The collision occurred at a point approximately ten feet westerly of the center of the intersection of said streets.
At the time of the collision herein referred to, section 131 of the Motor Vehicle Act, as amended in 1923, read as follows: "A vehicle entering an intersection of public highways, at a lawful speed, shall have the right of way over a vehicle approaching from its left, unless such vehicle *671 approaching from the left shall have first entered into such intersection at a lawful speed, in which event the vehicle on the left shall have the right of way." The testimony of the plaintiff and of the two other persons occupying the Ford coupe was to the effect that the Ford was being driven at a speed of about twelve miles per hour; that when the Ford coupe entered the intersection of Industrial Street and Mill Street the stage was several feet north of the north line of the intersection; that as the Ford continued on westerly across the intersection to a point west of said intersection, the stage traveling at a speed of about thirty miles per hour, came into the intersection and smashed into the Ford coupe before the driver of the coupe could do anything to avoid a collision. The front part of the stage struck the right-hand side of the coupe on which the plaintiff was sitting, breaking the door and generally smashing the entire right-hand side of the coupe. The complaint and the testimony set forth the injuries suffered by the plaintiff, but as no point is made as to the damages, a recital of plaintiff's injuries is omitted. The momentum of the stage carried the coupe to a point south of the south line of Industrial Street, and there came to a stop. On the part of the defendant the bus driver testified that the stage traveling at about fifteen miles per hour first entered the intersection; that at the time the stage entered the intersection the Ford coupe was at a point from twenty to twenty-five feet east of the east line of Mill Street, and was traveling at a speed of between twenty-five and thirty miles per hour. That as the coupe came westerly across the intersection, the wheels of the coupe ran on both sides of the "button" in the center of the intersection, or, as witnesses described it, the coupe straddled the button and that at a point just west of the intersection the Ford coupe was turned quickly to the left as if to avoid a collision, and that the Ford toppled over upon the hood, bumper, and left fender of the stage.
The wrecked Ford was taken into the possession of the defendant immediately following the accident, and to a garage maintained by it near the scene of the collision. It remained in this place for about two weeks, and then was removed to an open lot immediately adjoining a garage belonging to the defendant, where it remained until *672 it was placed upon a truck and hauled to the courthouse for purposes of inspection during the trial. It appears that the coupe was in plain view of the defendant during all the time after the accident up to its removal to the courthouse, as just stated. The Ford was moved once about twenty feet in its storage place during the time between the accident and the date of its inspection at the trial, and also was loaded upon a truck and taken to the courthouse for inspection, as above stated. It appears that the left rear wheel, the spokes of which were broken, was removed from it either during the time it was in the defendant's yard or in the storage yard, and other wheels which did not belong to the car were put on it to hold it up. What was left of the right-hand door, which at one time was lying inside the car where it had been driven by the collision, was missing. Some other little changes as to the lining of the car appear also to have taken place. Testimony was introduced by the parties as to the condition of the Ford coupe immediately after the collision, and also as to the changes that had been made in its condition. After all this had been done and after the defendant had introduced considerable testimony as to the condition of the car and photographed as to its condition, the court permitted an inspection of the coupe.
The assignments of error presented for our consideration are two in number; first, that the court erred in permitting the jury to view the Ford coupe; second, that the court erred in instructing the jury that the bus driver and the employees of the defendant were interested witnesses, etc. The objection that the court erred in permitting an inspection of the coupe is based upon the theory of the defendant that the Ford coupe, by reason of the driver having turned sharply to the left, was caused to topple over upon the front of the Pickwick stage, and that the stage did not run into the Ford coupe, and that a certain indentation on the door of the Ford coupe substantiated their theory. [1] No argument is presented upon said appeal that the jury was wrong in coming to the conclusion that the Ford coupe first entered the intersection, though the testimony of the defendant's two bus drivers is set forth in which they state the contrary. If the Ford coupe first entered the intersection, it had, under the provision of the Motor *673 Vehicle Law as that law existed at the time of the collision, the right of way across that intersection, and the driver of the Ford coupe had the right to assume that the driver of the bus would observe that law, and if, as stated by the defendant's witnesses, the driver of the Ford coupe, in order to avoid a direct or other collision with the stage, essayed a sharp, left-hand turn and thereby the Ford coupe was toppled over against the front of the stage, the responsibility of the defendant would be exactly the same as though the collision had been head-on. The fact that the driver of the coupe attempted to avoid the collision when he became aware of the fact that danger was impending and imminent, and that the bus driver had not regarded the law but was coming across the intersection at a rate of speed which indicated that the stage could not be stopped, does not lessen the defendant's liability in any particular. The whole argument, based upon the assumption that the coupe toppled over before it was hit by the bus, is absolutely without any merit whatever if the premises are correct that the coupe first entered the intersection. [2] It therefore follows that no error on the part of the court could or can be predicated on the fact that an inspection of the Ford coupe was permitted. The fact that the bus hit the Ford or the Ford toppled against the bus had no bearing whatever upon the right of way. It did bear upon the question as to whether the driver of the Ford coupe endeavored, in a perilous situation, to avoid the collision, or at least to avoid a direct hit. During the course of the trial the defendant exhibited five photographs of the Ford coupe which we cannot produce in this opinion, but an inspection of which shows that after having been introduced and shown to the jury, an inspection of the car by the jury could not have had any effect whatever. The photographs to which we have referred show the Ford coupe to be almost a complete wreck. In fact, the defendant's exhibit No. 6, showing the side of the Ford coupe on which the plaintiff was riding, leaves just one question in the mind of the jury, and that is how anyone could be in that position and escape with his life. Photographs introduced as exhibits such as we have herein referred to, which can be appreciated only by an inspection, could leave no possible ground for any prejudice arising from *674 an inspection of the car, even though the parts thereof to which we have referred were missing.
[3] The instruction, the giving of which is predicated as error, is as follows: "In weighing the evidence, you are to consider the credibility of witnesses who have testified before you. You are the sole and exclusive judges of their credibility. Their conduct, their character, as shown by the evidence; their manner on the stand; their relation to the parties, if any; their interest in the case; their bias and prejudice, if any; their degree of intelligence; the reasonableness or unreasonableness of their statements; and the strength or weakness of their recollection may be taken into consideration for the purpose of determining their credibility. This instruction, like all instructions, applies not only to one side but to both sides. Attorneys refer to the interest of witnesses on the other side.If there are interested witnesses or relatives on the side of the plaintiff, you should consider that in determining their credibility, but you should not on that account solely, disbelieve their testimony. On the other hand, the bus driverand the employees of the defendant were interested witnesses,
and the same rule applies to them, and only the same rule, that you should not on that account alone disbelieve their testimony, but should consider their interest in determining their credibility. A witness is presumed to speak the truth. This presumption, however, may be repelled by the manner in which the witness testifies, by the character of his testimony, his motives, or by contradictory evidence." The asserted prejudicial part of the instruction reads: "On the other hand, the bus-driver and the employees of the defendant were interested witnesses, and the same rule applies to them, and only the same rule, that you should not on that account alone, disbelieve their testimony, but should consider their interest in determining their credibility." The point is made that the court, in instructing the jury that the driver and employees of the defendant were interested witnesses, transgressed the exclusive province of the jury and instructed the jury upon a question of fact in contravention of section 19 of article VI of the constitution, which provides that: "Judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, but may state the testimony and declare the law." In support of this instruction the respondent cites, *675
first, the case of Ellis v. Lakeshore Michigan Southern R.R.Co.,
In the case of People v. Bush,
In Konig v. Lyon,
In the case of People v. Bernal,
In Huyck v. Rennie,
That the trial court went beyond its province instructing the jury that the employees of the defendant were interested witnesses seems to us very clear, but that does not, in and of itself, warrant a reversal of the judgment in this action. Just how far a trial court may go in instructions and an appellate court required to uphold the judgment under the provisions of section 4 1/2 of article VI of the constitution cannot be so definitely limited or stated in language as to make a rule promulgated for one case applicable to every other case. The case at bar differs somewhat from the ordinary run of actions, in that the instruction given apparently runs counter to a section of the state constitution, and just how far such an instruction may go without necessitating a reversal is not made clear by anything called to our attention by counsel in this case. In People v.O'Bryan,
It may be further stated that if the instruction set forth herein tended to discredit defendant's witnesses, it had the same effect upon the witnesses for the plaintiff. None but relatives testified in her behalf. The relatives and the *680 two drivers were the only witnesses as to who had the right of way.
Being satisfied from the whole record that no error was committed in allowing the jury to view the wrecked Ford, and that the alleged error of the trial court in giving the instruction set out in this opinion did not result in a miscarriage of justice, and could not have had any influence upon a jury whatever, the judgment is affirmed.
Finch, P.J., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant 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 16, 1928.
All the Justices concurred.