Primarily this appeal involves the definition of the word “intoxication” as used in section 141% of the California Vehicle Act. The purpose of the section is to advance the safety of travel on public highways, and to protect the operator of a vehicle from the payment of damages resulting from an accident due to a failure to use ordinary care toward a person who accepts a ride without giving compensation therefor. The section provides that the person responsible for the operation of a vehicle is not relieved of liability for an injury or death proximately resulting from the intoxication of the person responsible for the operation of the vehicle. Appellant contends that the judgment lacks evidentiary support; that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, and that the trial court erred in the admission of certain evidence and in giving certain instruc *136 tions. These matters presented for consideration mainly relate to the subject of intoxication.
The word “intoxication” is not susceptible of a definition so accurate that it could fit the facts of each ease. Its meaning necessarily varies, depending upon its application to a situation, contract or statute. The use of the word in an insurance policy might be defined in accordance with its association with other words such as “insane” or “delirious”.
(Bakalars
v.
Continental Casualty Co.,
*137
The trial court correctly instructed the jury that the death in this ease must proximately result from the intoxication of the driver of the vehicle. The jury was also instructed in the language used in the decision of
People
v.
Dingle,
The court gave the following instruction: “The law presumes that the deceased exercised reasonable care in all matters connected with the accident. The law also presumes that the defendant was not intoxicated. Such presumptions are a species of evidence that continue with the respective parties unless and until contrary evidence has been introdued. ” A disputable presumption is a substitute for proof of facts. It is a species of evidence that may be accepted and acted upon when there is no other evidence to uphold the contention for which it stands. When evidence is introduced supporting such contention the evidence takes the place of the presumption and, as stated in
Paulsen
v.
Mc-Duffie,
4 Cal. (2d) 111 [
The next question raised on this appeal is—does the judgment lack evidentiary support of the defendant’s intoxication, and was the death of the guest proximately caused thereby? That alcoholic liquor was consumed is a cireum *139 stance tending to prove intoxication. The evidence shows that on the morning of the accident defendant was suffering from the results of liquor taken the day before. During the day of the accident he absorbed at least several glasses of wine. Subsequent to the accident he had an alcoholic breath. This evidence, notwithstanding the testimony opposed thereto, was sufficient to warrant the jury in determining that the defendant had partaken of intoxicating liquor. Immediately before the accident, driving on the wrong side of the street, defendant missed by two feet a collision with an interurban train. This accident was avoided by the motorman using his emergency brakes. With unabated speed of fifty-five miles an hour defendant continued for six hundred feet straight ahead, passing a wigwag signal with a ringing bell and a red light, and paying no attention to the approaching second interurban train, and crashed on the right side of the front thereof with such force that the automobile was partly telescoped, the cow catcher and bumper of the train bent, and the floor of the motorman’s cab splintered. Two guests were killed and the defendant injured. The evidence relative to the accident was sufficient to convince the jury that the alcoholic liquor consumed caused an abnormal mental or physical condition of the defendant that precluded him from operating his automobile with the care and caution that would be used by a normal person of ordinary prudence under the same circumstances, and that the death of the guest was proximately caused thereby.
. The cause without which the accident would not have occurred, under the implied findings of the jury, was intoxication. Appellant contends that if the defendant was intoxicated it was superinduced by the participation of the deceased in drinking alcoholic beverages on the day of the accident in the company of the defendant, and that the decedent must have known of the defendant’s intoxicated condition, and as the guest of defendant deceased was guilty of contributory negligence by assuming the risk of riding with an intoxicated driver. In the cases cited by appellant
(Jones
v.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.,
The court gave the following instruction: 11 The train involved in the collision testified to in this case had the right of way over all automobiles using the said highway, and it Avas the duty of every driver of an automobile to approach the said tracks with reasonable caution and, if necessary, to slow up and stop his automobile to permit the said train to pass. If the driver of an automobile fails to give the right of way. to a train, and if such failure is due to intoxication of the driver, the driver of such automobile is responsible for injuries or death resulting to a guest in his automobile directly or proximately caused thereby, unless the guest is guilty of negligence proximately contributing to his oaaui injuries or death.” The issue of right of way was a question of fact. The interurban train Avas traveling south on Poplar Street in the city of Oakland, preparing to turn into a private right of way between Twenty-fourth and Twenty-second Street junction at a speed of about eight miles an hour. When the train was approaching the curve the motorman saw the glare of the headlights of the oncoming automobile about fifteen hundred feet away, traveling north on the same street. In
*141
terurban trains under the present means of operation cannot travel except upon rails. To that extent the train had the right of way to which the operators of other vehicles should yield when necessary.
(Arnold
v.
San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Rys.,
Appellant complains of four instances of the admission of evidence prejudicial to the rights of appellant, based upon conclusions of the witnesses, or that the proper foundation for impeaching evidence had not been presented. It does not appear from an examination of the entire transcript of evidence or from the intrinsic nature of the alleged errors that substantial, if any, injury occurred that would warrant a reversal, or that alleged errors in the court’s rulings resulted in a miscarriage of justice. On the contrary, the record is singularly free from error in the court’s rulings on objections made to the admission of evidence.
A trial judge is in a better position than a reviewing court to weigh the evidence and determine whether the damages awarded are excessive. Only when it appears that the damages are so disproportionate that passion, prejudice or corruption must have swayed the jury will appellate courts interfere. In this case a widow and ten children were given $15,000. If the jury was justified in returning a verdict against the defendant, we conclude from all the facts of the case that the compensation was warranted.
Appellant claims that, by the refusal of the court to permit full examination of prospective jurors and by the misconduct of the jurors, he was denied a fair trial. The Key System, Ltd., was a party defendant when the complaint was filed on March 2, 1934. During the month of June of *143 the same year a dismissal without prejudice was filed against the railway company and the ease brought to trial before the statutory period of limitation had expired. After the defendant had exhausted his peremptory challenges a pensioned employee of the Key System was accepted as the twelfth juror. Counsel for defendant was given ample opportunity to examine the prospective juror. The juror was told that the defendant would attempt to prove the accident was entirely due to the negligence of those running the Key System train, and the following question was propounded and answered: “Q. That will not influence you in deciding our part of the ease at all ? A. Not at all. ’ ’
On the motion for new trial an affidavit was filed alleging that a certain juror returned from the jury room with a copy of the California Vehicle Act, and that after the return of the verdict affiant, one of the attorneys for the defendant, “learned” that the juror had shown a portion of the vehicle act to another juror prior to the conclusion of the case. From the record the latter portion of the statement was not borne out, and it does not appear that the copy of the vehicle act was produced in the jury room. Other affidavits were filed on behalf of defendant wherein it appeared that subsequent to the verdict a juror in conversation with one of defendant’s attorneys admitted that during the progress of the trial a juror visited the scene of the accident and took evidence out of court. Counteraffidavits were filed to the effect that the juror had merely driven an automobile in the vicinity of the accident but had not taken evidence out of court. The weight to be given to the allegations of the affidavits and counteraffidavits if admissible was a matter for the trial court to decide and not a matter to be determined upon appeal.
{Ham
v.
County of Los Angeles,
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P. J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
• A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on December 13, 1935, and an application 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 January 10,1936.
