276 P. 389 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
Plaintiff sued for damages for personal injuries received in a collision between an automobile driven by the defendant and one driven by her husband in which she was riding. Trial was by jury and the verdict was for defendant. Plaintiff appeals and assigns as error the giving and refusing to give certain instructions to the jury.
The details of how the collision occurred were differently described by different witnesses. Some placed it at the intersection of Old Homestead Road and the State Highway and others placed it thirty or forty feet north of that point. The chief point relied upon by appellant is the refusal of the court to give any instruction upon the doctrine of last clear chance. To show how this doctrine can be invoked by her, appellant relies upon the version of the accident as narrated by defendant's witnesses rather than upon the version narrated by her own witnesses. It is as follows: Defendant came into the highway from Old Homestead Road, he turned to his right at the intersection and traveled along the highway on his right-hand side of said highway at a moderate rate of speed until he was struck by plaintiff's machine. Plaintiff's automobile was traveling upon the highway approaching the defendant and approaching the intersection of Old Homestead Road at a fast rate of speed. Her husband undertook to overtake and pass a vehicle upon its left-hand side and this brought him upon the left-hand side of the highway. He applied, released and again applied *103 his brakes, his car marked a ninety-foot trail of rubber on the pavement while it proceeded in a skidding manner toward the point where it collided with defendant's automobile, knocking it over against a stump, then it proceeded thirty or forty feet further and lay down on its left side in the highway where Old Homestead Road crosses it.
It is claimed that defendant should have moved over further to his right and thus have allowed plaintiff's automobile to pass without colliding with defendant.
Defendant on cross-examination testified at one place as follows:
"So then, when Mr. Pearce came over on the left-hand side out of the line of travel, you were 110 feet away from him? Yes.
"Why didn't you turn into the dirt? I never expected him to come over as far as I was.
"You assumed he would pull over that way? Not altogether, but to some extent, I hoped he would go back in line.
"And you never pulled off the road at all? I did.
"But you were partly off at the time, you were half off of it, weren't you? When he struck me, yes.
"Why didn't you pull over altogether and go into the dirt? I felt I had a perfect right to my side of the highway and I was off just as far as I could go."
In another place defendant testified as follows:
"Why didn't you pull out of his way and get into the dirt? I did, I did all that I had a chance to do.
"You said you assumed you had a right on the highway and that is one of the reasons you stayed there? I said I had a right on the highway, yes.
"And that was one of the reasons why you stayed there instead of pulling out? I started to pull out.
"But you said a moment ago that you remained on the highway there because that was your right, and you were on your right side and you had a right there. I don't believe I made that statement.
"Do you withdraw that statement, if you made it? If I made it, I do."
Surveyor Ford testified from measurements on the highway map that there was thirty-five feet from the center of the pavement to the stump beside the road. Appellant *104 deduces from this testimony that defendant had plenty of space to his right in which to turn out and away from plaintiff's automobile, but the same witness testified that there was not thirty-five feet of traveled roadway between these two points even though there was that much space between them.
[1] The evidence shows that plaintiff's automobile skidded sideways into defendant's automobile and, although it shows that defendant saw plaintiff's automobile start to come into the left-hand side of the highway while over one hundred feet distant, there is no evidence pointed out to show that defendant either realized or should have realized from what he saw that plaintiff was in a position of danger from which she could not extricate herself and none is pointed out to show that defendant had sufficient time after this in which to avoid the collision by the exercise of ordinary care.
We conclude, therefore, that the evidence was not of such a character as to make it error for the court to reject requested instructions upon the doctrine of last clear chance. [2] In addition to this is the fact that the only two instructions requested by appellant upon the subject are defective in themselves for failure to include important elements of the doctrine. Requested instruction B did not state that plaintiff's husband must have ceased to have any power of preventing the accident nor that defendant must have thereafter been guilty of negligence in failing to avoid it. [3] Requested instruction C has all the defects pointed out in Townsend v. Butterfield,
[5] Appellant criticises instruction XX given by the court. It told the jury in substance that, "if you cannot determine what was the proximate cause of the accident your verdict must be for the defendant." It is said that the proximate cause of the accident might be either defendant's negligence without the assistance of plaintiff's contributory negligence or it might be the defendant's failure to avail himself of the last clear chance; that if the jury felt that it was surely one of these two causes without being able to determine which one of the two was the proximate cause, it could still find for the plaintiff. If we are right in our decision that last clear chance was not in the case under the evidence this instruction is not open to the criticism directed against it by appellant.
[6] It was not error for the court to instruct on unavoidable accident at the request of the defendant. Metcalfe v. PacificElectric Ry. Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on May 2, 1929, and a petition 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 May 29, 1929.
All the Justices present concurred.