10 P.2d 63 | Cal. | 1932
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment on a verdict for $4,000 in an action for damages in an automobile accident case.
The defendant, with his mother and sister, all residents of San Francisco, made a trip to Montreal by automobile in 1929. When they started on their homeward journey, the plaintiff, a second cousin of the defendant, joined the party as a guest. The defendant's sister stopped at Lincoln, Nebraska, and the remaining three proceeded on their way toward San Francisco, their destination. While traveling on a paved highway in the vicinity of Oklahoma City at about 4 o'clock in the afternoon of November 15, 1929, an accident occurred in which the automobile operated by the defendant collided with an automobile coming from the opposite direction. An automobile about 100 feet ahead of the defendant's car slowed up and in order to avoid hitting it the defendant turned upon the left-hand side of the highway and met the other car head on. In the accident the plaintiff received numerous injuries, one of which was a fractured right ankle, the latter crippling him for life.
In support of the appeal it is first contended that the complaint does not state a cause of action and the court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action for the reason that there was no allegation of gross negligence on the part of the defendant as required by section 141 3/4 of the California Vehicle Act, as the same was in effect in November, 1929, when the alleged tort was committed. It is here noted that the section was amended in 1931 by striking out the words "gross negligence". (Stats. 1931, p. 1693.) But in view of our conclusions on the merits of the appeal and under the authorities to be cited, it was unnecessary for the plaintiff either to allege or prove gross negligence.
[1] Again, it is contended that the complaint fails to state a cause of action in that it does not specifically plead the law of Oklahoma where the cause of action arose. Prior to 1927 whenever a foreign law was relied upon, it was necessary to plead and prove the same as any other fact of which the courts of this state did not take judicial notice. (Peck *365
v. Noee,
[2] It is the settled law in the United States that an action in tort is governed by the law of the jurisdiction where the tort was committed, and as it is a transitory action, it may be maintained in any jurisdiction where the defendant may be found.[3] It is the general rule in tort actions that the court will, if it has jurisdiction of the necessary parties, and can do substantial justice between them in accordance with its own forms of procedure, enforce the foreign law, if it is not contrary to the public policy of the forum, to abstract justice or pure morals, or injurious to the welfare of the people of the state of the forum. (12 Cor. Jur., p. 453.) In Loucks v. Standard OilCo.,
[5] It is next contended that the evidence is insufficient to establish even ordinary negligence and that therefore the plaintiff may not recover in any event. It would serve no useful purpose to relate the facts in more detail. We have examined the record and find therein sufficient evidence upon which the jury could rightly find for the plaintiff.
[6] When the case was called for trial jurors were in attendance and ready to take the jury-box. Whereupon the defendant's counsel interposed an objection to a jury trial on the ground that the jury fees had not been deposited ten days in advance of trial. The objection was overruled and pursuant to a direction by the court the case proceeded to trial before a jury. The objection was apparently based on subdivision 5 of section 631 of the Code of Civil Procedure as amended in 1929, wherein it was provided that failure to deposit one day's jury fees with the clerk "within ten days prior to the date set for trial" may constitute a waiver of trial by jury. Just what the last-quoted language of the section means is problematical. Its unfortunate wording is subject to the construction that the required deposit might be made at any time within the ten-day period prior to the *368 trial, which would include the last minute before the trial. When the objection to the trial by jury was made, the plaintiff's counsel announced that he was then ready to pay the fees. Any ambiguity in the code section as it then read should be resolved in favor of according to a litigant a jury trial. When so resolved no prior payment was necessary. In 1931 the sentence was amended so as to eliminate the word "within" before the words "ten days prior", and the difficulty arising under the old law has been obviated.
No other points made require discussion. The judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Preston, J., Langdon, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.