8 P.2d 853 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
Plaintiffs sued for damages for the death of Taza M. Hughes. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of $24,500, and from the judgment on the verdict the defendants appeal upon typewritten transcripts.
The defendant railway company operates a main line railway through Contra Costa County which is crossed at a flag station known as Nichols by a private road running to the plant of the General Chemical Company. On March 12, 1926, at about 3:30 P.M. Mrs. Hughes drove in a Chevrolet sedan over this crossing to the office of the chemical company where she met a deputy registrar of voters and was duly registered. She returned soon after along the same road, and while crossing the tracks of the railway company was struck by a through train and killed. Mrs. Hughes was a school-teacher employed in a public school at Nichols and was thoroughly familiar with this crossing. Leaving the plant of the chemical company the road went over a bridge covering the tracks of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company. Along the top of this bridge a railing was maintained about the height of the middle of the glass on the door of the Chevrolet. Following the bridge in the direction of the defendant railway company's tracks the road reached the level ground at a point 70 feet from the first track. Over this distance the view was unobstructed and approaching trains were visible for a distance of 1,000 feet or more. At the time of the collision the sky was clear. There was no rain, no fog. The roadway was dry. The witness who registered Mrs. Hughes observed her passing over this bridge in her automobile and at the time she reached the peak of the bridge he heard the whistle of the approaching train which he described as the ordinary crossing whistle which was made by the train daily when it approached that crossing. After the deceased had gone beyond the peak of the bridge the same witness heard several sharp blasts of the whistle which he understood to be a sound of danger, and soon thereafter heard the crash of the collision. Two other witnesses observed the deceased after she had passed the bridge. The *274 fireman upon the approaching train saw her at a point about 75 feet from the crossing to which she was proceeding at a rate of speed of approximately 8 or 10 miles per hour. The witness Leonarduzzi, called by respondents, testified that he stood at a point 100 feet from the crossing and that, "I remember hearing the bell on the train ringing. Then I saw the machine coming on and saw the crash." At the time the fireman first observed the deceased the pilot of the engine was about 1,000 feet west of the crossing. The train was traveling at about 45 or 50 miles per hour; a bell weighing 200 pounds was constantly ringing and the crossing whistle was sounded. As the train approached, the deceased continued to near the crossing at the same low rate of speed and without stopping her car at any point of her approach. When she was about 15 feet from the near rail she suddenly increased her speed and attempted to cross in front of the approaching train. At this time the pilot of the engine was about 100 feet from the crossing. The engineer immediately set the brakes and gave several sharp blasts of the whistle. The automobile was struck, however, broadside in the middle of the railroad tracks.
Of the foregoing facts there is no substantial dispute. One disinterested witness testified that when the train was about 250 feet from the crossing he heard the bell ringing, and other witnesses called by the plaintiffs testified that they heard the warning signal of the engineer. There is some suggestion in the brief of respondents that there might be some conflict in the testimony as to the ringing of the bell in that three witnesses called by the plaintiff testified that they did not hear the bell ringing. The conflict is fanciful and not substantial because each of these three witnesses was shown to have been at a point far distant from the approaching train and in the offices of the chemical company engaged either in conversation or the transaction of other business. Thus it was not reasonable to expect that they should have heard the bell ringing. [1] Where a witness was in no position to have seen or heard, his testimony that he did not see or hear does not raise a conflict with positive testimony of those who were in such a position and who testified that they did see or hear. (10 R.C.L., p. 1011; Elias
v. Collins,
[2] The case is controlled by the well-settled rule that one who fails to stop, look and listen upon approaching a railroad crossing is guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. This duty, the Supreme Court said, in Koster v. Southern Pac.Co.,
[3] The evidence of the contributory negligence of the deceased is undisputed. Though the respondents urge that her view of the approaching train might have been obscured by the railing upon the bridge and by trees and small houses which were along the line of the defendant's right of way, the positive evidence of their own witnesses is that there was no such obstruction, and the physical facts demonstrate unmistakably that for a distance of at least 70 feet before the tracks were reached the view of the approaching train was wholly unobstructed. *276
[4] The respondents seek comfort in the decision of the Supreme Court in Smellie v. Southern Pac. Co.,
[6] The respondents urge that the issue of contributory negligence was not properly pleaded and that it cannot be considered on this appeal because the defendants did not confess their own negligence and raise this issue in avoidance. The defendants pleaded that the death of the deceased and the damage to the plaintiffs was caused solely by and resulted from the negligent acts and omissions of the decedent. Though the plea is not as full as is usually employed in cases of this character it nevertheless put the question in issue, and plaintiffs' own testimony conclusively showed a case of contributory negligence and this in itself is sufficient to raise the issue. (Hoffman
v. Southern Pac. Co.,
Because of our conclusion that the judgment must be reversed for the reasons stated it would serve no purpose to discuss the other errors assigned.
The judgment is reversed.
Sturtevant, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on March 26, 1932, and an application by respondents to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on April 25, 1932.