28 P.2d 23 | Cal. | 1933
This cause was transferred to this court after decision by the District Court of Appeal. We are in full accord with the conclusion reached by the District Court of Appeal regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment and agree with that court "that the case presents a substantial conflict in the evidence". We question, however, the correctness of the determination of that court that the trial court so seriously erred in its instructions to the jury as to compel a reversal of the judgment.
[1] The first instruction to which the appellants object is as follows: "You are instructed that when a person is in imminent danger he is not called upon to exercise that intelligence and judgment he would be expected to exercise were he not in such danger, so if a party in imminent danger has two ways open to him but has not the time to stop and investigate and determine which is the right or safe way and which is the wrong or unsafe way, his choosing of the latter is not, under the circumstances, negligence on his part." This instruction, the appellants contend, was erroneous in that it omitted an essential element of the rule of imminent danger in that it failed to inform the jury that the person claiming the benefit of said rule must himself be "without negligence on his part". This contention must be sustained. (Brooks v. City of Monterey,
The question is, therefore, squarely presented as to whether the giving of a concededly erroneous instruction is cured by the giving of a corrected instruction upon the same subject. Appellants contend that in such a case the instructions are necessarily contradictory and that it is impossible to determine from the record upon which theory the jury based their verdict and, therefore, the judgment predicated thereon must be reversed. While this may be true generally, it is not the rule applied in all cases. [2] The distinction between the two types of instructions and the reasons why the rule applies to one and not the other is stated as follows: "If a single instruction omits an essential element of the cause, but is a correct declaration of the law so far as it goes, and the omitted element is correctly given in another instruction, the omission will ordinarily be cured thereby. If, however, an essential principle of law is stated to the jury materially incorrect, this prejudicial error will not ordinarily be cured by a corrected declaration of the same principle in another instruction." (Soda v. Marriott,
It will be observed that in the instruction considered in the cited case the same omission occurred which is found in instruction No. 23 in the present case, and it was that omission which the court referred to when mentioning "the conduct of the plaintiff before the imminent danger arose". A reading of pages 60 and 61 of the case of Vedder v. Bireley, supra, so indicates. We find a discussion of this subject in the case ofGaster v. Hinkley,
We conclude from this discussion that the two instructions were not contradictory, and that when read together we do not think that the jury could have been misled or confused by them. This was to all intents and purposes the effect of the decision inDrury v. Los Angeles Ry. Corp.,
[4] Appellants also complain of the following instruction: "You are instructed that if you find that defendants were negligent, as alleged in plaintiffs' complaint, and that their negligence proximately contributed to any injury sustained by plaintiffs, then you are not to compare their negligence or determine which was more negligent or which contributed most to the injury, since both would be then jointly and severally liable and the plaintiffs may recover against either or both of them, provided, of course, they were free from contributory negligence; and in these circumstances, if you so find, it will be your duty in this case to render your verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants." Appellants' first objection to this instruction is in the use of the words, "proximatelycontributed to any injuries sustained by plaintiffs". They contend that the instruction as worded is an incorrect statement of the law, is misleading to the jury, and prejudicial error for the reason that in the place of the objectionable words the court should have, in referring to defendants' negligence, used the words, "proximate cause of the injury". As appellants *587
state in their brief, "In the case of Power v. Crown StageCo., (1927)
[5] Appellants further criticise that part of this instruction whereby the jury were instructed upon the doctrine of joint tort-feasors for the reason that this doctrine was entirely without the issues of the case. There are two defendants in the action, the Dabney-Johnson Oil Corporation and L.K. Black. The pleadings and the proof show that the action against these two defendants was predicated upon the theory that the corporation was the owner of the truck with which plaintiffs' machine collided and that Black was the driver of the truck at the time of the accident. No claim was made at any time that the two defendants were joint tort-feasors, but it was sought to hold Black as the party actually guilty of the negligence that caused the plaintiffs' injuries, and the Dabney-Johnson Corporation, as the employer of Black, under the doctrine of respondeatsuperior. Under this state of the case the instruction, in so far as it instructed the jury upon the doctrine of joint tort-feasors, was clearly erroneous. We are at a loss, however, to perceive how this erroneous instruction prejudiced the rights of the appellants in any material respect. Appellants cite numerous authorities which hold in the particular instances recited therein that it was prejudicial errer to instruct the jury upon an issue not within the evidence or the pleadings. It may readily be conceded that in certain cases, depending upon the facts in each particular case, the rule would be as contended for by the appellants. But appellants have not suggested, and we are unable of our own initiative, to conceive any reason why the giving of this instruction would unduly confuse the jury or in any way prejudice the rights of appellants. We may say, before leaving the subject, that the jury were correctly and minutely instructed upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, and were told explicitly that *588 the Dabney-Johnson Corporation could only be held liable as the employer of Black and then only in case Black was guilty of negligence while acting in the course of his employment.
[6] A third objection to instruction No. 27 is predicated upon the contention that it is a formula instruction and that it directs a verdict for the plaintiffs and entirely omits any reference to the element of proximate cause. As we have seen, the words "proximately contributed" were used in the instruction instead of "proximate cause", and we have, we think, shown that no prejudicial error was committed by the court in the use of said substituted words. No reason appears why a different ruling should be made regarding the objection to this instruction now under consideration. There is some question whether this is a formula instruction. It is not necessary for us, however, to pass upon this question in view of what we have just stated. We may state that the reasoning and conclusion of the court in Douglas
v. Southern Pac. Co.,
[7] Two other instructions were attacked by appellants, instruction No. 35 and instruction No. 36. Instruction No. 35 embodied a section of the city ordinance of the city of Long Beach, the city in which the collision occurred, relating to stopping, standing and parking of vehicles in the streets of said city. It further contained a statement applying the provisions of said section of the ordinance to the facts of the present case. The appellate court held that said instruction was free from error, with which ruling we agree. As to instruction No. 36, the appellate court made no comment. It relates to the duty imposed upon the operator of a motor vehicle to equip his machine with lights as required by sections 99, 106 and 109 of the California Vehicle Act. In these two instructions, the jury was told that the plaintiffs could not recover if they were "guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the accident in question". The criticism of these two instructions is that they should have stated that the plaintiffs could not recover if they were guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the accident rather than negligence which was the proximate *589
cause of the accident. An instruction in almost the precise language of these two instructions, in so far as it relates to the criticised portions thereof, was approved by the court in the case of Katz v. T.I. Butler Co.,
The jury was fully and, in our opinion, fairly instructed upon all of the issues in the case. The objections advanced by the appellants against the instructions of the court, while clearly and forcibly presented, and in most instances supported by persuasive arguments, are not, in our opinion, of sufficient weight or substance to justify a reversal of the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Preston, J., Langdon, J., Shenk, J., Thompson, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.