202 P. 919 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1921
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *746 This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by defendant in negligently starting one of its cars after the car had stopped to allow passengers to alight therefrom.
By the verdict of a jury plaintiff was awarded $2,500 damages, and from the judgment rendered thereon the defendant appeals.
Appellant excepts to certain instructions given and to the refusal of the court to give others offered, and also contends that the damages are excessive.
Plaintiff is seventy-three years of age and at the time of the accident was a seamstress, earning $25 to $30 a week. She lived with her married daughter, Mrs. Holman, in Hyde Street, near Clay, in San Francisco. On the afternoon of May 26, 1919, in company with her daughter, she boarded an east-bound Clay Street cable car at Sacramento and Fillmore Streets. The car had an inclosed section in the middle with open portions at each end. A long seat on each side of the open section is reached directly from the street by running-boards. The open sections of the car have wooden uprights to which are attached iron hand-bars. Plaintiff took a seat on the left rear portion of the open section and her daughter sat beside her. Mrs. Holman, immediately before reaching Hyde Street, tried to attract the attention of the conductor to inform him that she wished to get off the car at Hyde Street, but failed to catch his eye because he was in the front portion of the *747 car. However, the conductor did give the signal to stop and the car came to a complete stop at Hyde Street to allow some passengers to get on and others to get off the car. After the car stopped, Mrs. Holman stepped off the car on to the ground, and reached up and took hold of plaintiff's right hand to assist her to alight. With her left hand, plaintiff took hold of the rear stanchion and raised herself to her feet. She was in the act of stepping down when the car started. The starting of the car caused plaintiff's body to be swung around from this unstable position so that she faced the rear of the car. Her hand or arm caught between the iron hand-bar and the wooden stanchion, and thus held, she was dragged across Hyde Street, until a jolt of the car loosened her from this position and she fell backward upon the pavement. She was assisted to her residence, which was a short distance from the place where the accident occurred, and was put to bed by her daughter. A physician was called to treat her. For several days she was in a stupor. Her back, head, and right elbow were injured and she was under a physician's care for several weeks and was confined to her bed for over two months.
[1] Since the accident, according to plaintiff's testimony, she has suffered intensely, from pain in her back and head, from a sensation of wrenching and pulling on the nerves, has been unable to walk even about a room without staggering or to do any work. She has been unable to sleep well, has lost her appetite, and has given up hope of any permanent recovery. Her physicians attributed her condition at the time of the trial to shock and nervous symptoms due to the accident, and expressed the opinion that she would never be much better. Plaintiff testified that prior to the accident she was in perfect health and had not required the services of a doctor for thirty years.
Under these facts, we think it cannot be said that the damages are excessive. It is not challenged in the record that plaintiff was earning from $25 to $30 a week immediately prior to the accident and had been unable to do any work since. The actual loss of money from her business, at the time of the trial, estimated at $25 a week, amounted to $1,950, to which must be added the nurse's fee of $30 and a physician's bill of $115. Something is allowable *748 for physical and mental suffering out of the $2,500 judgment.
[2] Three instructions offered by defendant were refused. The gist of two of the instructions so offered is that the carrier is not liable if the passenger does not notify the conductor of her desire to leave the car, nor is it liable if, when the car stops for a reasonable time, the passenger has not previously nor does not then, signify to the conductor her intention of alighting, and the conductor does not actually see her in the act of alighting. In the instant case it appears, without contradiction, that the conductor did give the signal to stop and that the car was at a complete standstill before plaintiff made any attempt to get off the car. [3] The car being at a standstill, Mrs. Holman having alighted safely and remained standing with her hand outstretched to assist the plaintiff, and plaintiff being in the act of stepping down from the car, she had a right to assume that a reasonable time would be given her to alight, and that the conductor, before starting the car, would see that no passenger was in the act of alighting.
In the case of Hoffman v. Pacific Electric Co. et al.,
It is clear, in the light of the above authorities, that the instructions offered by defendant on this question were improper and were rightly refused. The case ofDougherty v. Union Traction Co.,
It is apparent that the facts in the present case clearly differentiate it from the Dougherty case, supra, and bring it within the rule of the case of Hoffman v. Pacific Electric Co.,supra. [4] The other instruction offered by the defendant assumed a fact not in evidence, viz.: That the plaintiff started to get off the car after the signal was given by the conductor to go ahead. Plaintiff, her daughter, and four apparently disinterested witnesses testified that plaintiff had started to get off the car before the conductor gave the signal to start the car. Nor did the conductor, nor anyone else testifying for the defendant, say that the plaintiff started to alight from the car after the signal had been given to start. All the conductor said was that "everything was clear" and that he saw no sign whatever of any other woman than Mrs. Holman rise to get off. There is nothing in the record to warrant the assertion that plaintiff started to leave the car after the conductor had given the signal for the gripman to go ahead.
Appellant contends that because the conductor stated that he did not see the plaintiff in the act of alighting at the time he gave the signal to start the car, the jury had a right to infer that plaintiff started to leave the car after the signal was given. In the first place, the negation of the conductor is not coextensive with the statements sought to be negatived. The clear, positive testimony of several persons was to the effect that the plaintiff started to leave the car while it was at a standstill and that the car started while she was in the act of alighting. The conductor then testified that he did not see the plaintiff in the act of alighting when he gave the signal to go ahead, non constat that she was not actually in the act of alighting. We are, therefore, *750 of the opinion that the record does not show a substantial conflict in the evidence upon this question.
[5] Appellant objects to the giving of the following instruction: "It is the duty of a common carrier, after having stopped its car to enable passengers to alight, to know before starting up the car again whether such passengers in the act of attempting to get off are in a position to be injured by the starting up of the car before such passenger can alight, and it would be negligence to start the car under such circumstances suddenly, and thereby injure the passenger." An instruction substantially the same as this one was given in the case ofCody v. Market St. Ry. Co.,
[7] Objection is made to an instruction declaring it to be the duty of a carrier of passengers at its stopping places to stop the car a sufficient length of time to enable passengers desiring to do so, to alight therefrom in safety and to hold the car still during that time; that should the carrier start the car while a passenger is on the steps of the car and in the act of alighting, without giving him sufficient time to alight, and without giving notice or warning to the passenger, whereby the passenger is thrown from the car and injured, then the carrier is guilty of negligence. Appellant contends that the instruction is erroneous in this case because it does not appear that plaintiff notified the conductor that she desired to alight from the car. The objection is not good; it is disposed of by the discussion of this question herein in relation to other instructions. The evidence showed that the car had stopped to allow passengers to alight and that plaintiff's daughter had alighted and was assisting plaintiff, who was in the act of alighting when the car started. Under such circumstances, defendant was as much obligated to see that plaintiff was not in the act of alighting as it would have been if plaintiff had been the passenger who had actually given the signal to stop. We are unable to see any difference in the obligation upon the carrier between a case where the passenger who has actually given the signal to stop is in the act of alighting and a case where any one of a number of passengers is in the act of alighting at a stopping place, after the car has stopped upon a signal given by one of their number.
[8] Appellant also objects to the giving of the following instruction: "The carrier of passengers is required to exercise the highest degree of care in their transportation, and is responsible for injuries received by them while in the course of transportation which might have been avoided by ordinary care. Hence, when it is shown that the injury to the passenger was caused by the act of the carrier in operating the instrumentalities employed in its business, there is a presumption of negligence which throws upon the carrier the burden of showing that the injury was sustained without any negligence on its part." A practically identical *752
instruction was given in the Cody case, supra, and was declared by the supreme court to be a proper one. The same rule had been announced previously, in this state, in the case of McCurrie v.Southern Pac. Co.,
[9] The last assignment of error made by the appellant is with reference to an instruction upon the question of damages. The instruction complained of is: "If you should find from the evidence that plaintiff has sustained any injuries because of the negligence of defendant and its employees, and should also find from the evidence that by reason of such injuries, plaintiff has, since receiving the same, and does now, in good faith, suffer from the reasonable apprehension that she will in the future be permanently disabled as the natural and proximate result of such injuries, then I instruct you that such apprehended disability is an element of damages you may take into consideration in arriving at the amount of your verdict."
While this instruction is not entirely unambiguous, we are of the opinion that its fair meaning, and the meaning which it conveyed to the jury, is, that the mental suffering endured by the plaintiff up to the time of the trial, due to her reasonable apprehension of permanent disability (which reasonable apprehension was the proximate result of the accident), was an element to be considered by the jury in arriving at its verdict. As so construed, the instruction was proper under the principle of law announced in the case ofBoa v. San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Rys.,
Appellant contends that this instruction is violative of section
We shall consider briefly the authorities cited by the appellant on this question: In the case of Pouchan v. Godeau,
In the case of Rouse v. Pacific Elec. Ry. Co.,
In the case of Saylor v. Taylor,
The case of Melone v. Sierra Ry. Co.,
The other cases cited by the appellant upon this question are also not in point. They do not involve the element of damages covered by the instruction, as we view it, in the present case. In all of these cases the question involved was either the propriety of a recovery for pain and anguish to be suffered in the future, or for possible future disability apprehended by the person injured. Under our view of the instruction in the present case no such questions are involved.
However, if our interpretation of this instruction be an improper one, and the instruction be open to the objections urged against it by the appellant, nevertheless we are of the opinion that the giving of the instruction would not be reversible error under the facts of this case. As stated before, the actual damages pleaded and proved, without the slightest effort at contradiction, amounted to $1,950 loss of earnings from the date of the injury to the date of the trial; $115 for doctor's services and $30 paid to a nurse — in all $2,095. It appears, then, that there was, approximately, $400 allowed for mental and physical suffering, for plaintiff's nervous and helpless condition, for her loss of sleep and appetite and her loss of capacity to attend *755 to her household duties or to walk about unaided, and for her loss or impairment of earning power in the future. The trial was had a year and a half after the accident, and the testimony was to the effect that all the conditions above mentioned still existed at that time, and plaintiff's physicians stated that there was little hope of any improvement in her condition. Assuredly, $400 is not an excessive amount of damages for the mental and physical suffering of plaintiff up to the date of the trial. Under these circumstances, in support of the judgment, we must assume that the $400 covered the above-enumerated physical injuries and mental and physical suffering, all of which were proper elements of damages which were allowable. It is, therefore, unnecessary to charge any portion of this sum of $400 either to mental suffering due to apprehension of permanent disability, under our view of the instruction, or to apprehended future disability, under appellant's view of the same. We are, therefore, of the opinion that even though this instruction be erroneous, it was not prejudicial and would not warrant a reversal of this judgment.
Furthermore, the verdict of the jury in this case is a manifestly just one, and no judgment may be set aside on the ground of misdirection of the jury, unless, after an examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, the court shall be of the opinion that the error complained of has resulted in a miscarriage of justice. (Sec. 4 1/2, art. VI, Const.)
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. In my opinion the trial court committed at least two prejudicial errors. It was claimed by the plaintiff that the defendant's car had come to a stop and while the car was so stopped, and while she was in the act of alighting, the car was started with a jerk which caused her injury. These allegations the defendant denied and also pleaded the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. On the trial of the case the plaintiff called the conductor as a witness. He stated that at the time in question he was standing at the back end of the car (which would be immediately behind the plaintiff). *756
He also stated that while the car was at a standstill some passengers got off and then, "I see my platform clear and with my left arm I proceeded to go ahead, and seeing everything was clear I walked inside to get the rest of the fares that had boarded the car. . . . She [the plaintiff's daughter] was clear off the car when I saw her. Everything was clear, and I proceeded down to collect one or two fares. . . . At that time I saw no sign whatever of any other lady rise to get off or show any signs of getting off. . . . When I gave the two bells to go ahead I was standing to the rear." When the case stood thus, the trial court instructed the jury as follows: "The carrier of passengers is required to exercise the highest degree of care in their transportation, and is responsible for injuries received by them while in the course of transportation which might have been avoided by ordinary care. Hence, when it is shown that the injury to the passenger was caused by the act of the carrier, in operating the instrumentalities employed in its business, there is a presumption of negligence which throws upon the carrier the burden of showing that the injury was sustained without any negligence on its part." That instruction was highly prejudicial. It violated the rule in Steele v.Pacific Electric Ry. Co.,
It is patent from the record that conceding that an accident had occurred, and conceding that the plaintiff had been injured, and conceding that the injury occurred through the fault of the defendant, still it was the theory of the defense that the plaintiff's injury was slight; that she had wholly recovered, and that her claim for damages was excessive. When the parties stood before the court making these conflicting contentions, the court instructed the jury as follows: "If you should find from the evidence that plaintiff has sustained any injuries because of the negligence of defendant and its employees, and should also find from the evidence that by reason of such injuries, plaintiff has, since receiving the same, and does now, in good faith, suffer from the reasonable apprehension that she *757
will in the future be permanently disabled as the natural and proximate result of such injuries, then I instruct you that such apprehended disability is an element of damages you may take into consideration in arriving at the amount of your verdict." The instruction was clearly erroneous and in direct conflict with the rule as stated in Pouchan v. Godeau,
I think the case should be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
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 December 29, 1921.
All the Justices concurred.
Lawlor, J., was absent, and Richards, J., pro tem., was acting.