281 P. 1081 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *276 The plaintiff herein appeals from a judgment for the defendants in an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by reason of a collision between the automobile in which she was riding as a guest and a truck and trailer owned and operated by defendants.
The accident occurred at about 4:30 A.M. of March 7, 1925. Appellant, a young woman, had gone out for a drive with one Clarence Habecker. Starting from Los Angeles at about 8 o'clock in the evening of the preceding day they had driven to Santa Monica in Habecker's touring car and to a point somewhere on the highway running northwest of Santa Monica and along the ocean shore. Here the car was parked for several hours while the two young people "watched the waves." Whether or not the waves were wild and what, if anything, they were saying does not appear in the record before us nor is it pertinent to the issues in the case. They started on their homeward journey shortly after midnight, but were compelled to stop en route to Los Angeles for repairs to a broken gas line, so that it was about half-past four in the morning when they reached the vicinity of the intersection of Coronado Street with Sunset Boulevard in that city, along which latter thoroughfare Habecker was driving in an easterly direction. Appellant was seated in the front seat of the automobile beside Habecker, in a reclining position, when the crash occurred. The three-ton truck of respondents, with a five-ton trailer *277 attached to it, had run out of gasoline and had been left where it stopped when that occurred, on the south side of Sunset Boulevard, between Coronado and Waterloo Streets, "at a point about five feet south of the southerly car track on said Sunset boulevard" — to quote from the findings. The court found that at the time of the collision a red tail-light was burning at the rear of the trailer. There was also testimony that the truck driver was standing at the rear of the trailer, waving his arms to signal approaching traffic. Into the rear end of the trailer the car driven by Habecker crashed, with the result that appellant received severe and in all probability permanent injuries. The court found, also, that at the time and place of the accident "the sun had not risen and was not shining, the street lamps were not lighted; the weather was clear and it was sufficiently light so that said truck and trailer were visible for a distance of one hundred and twenty feet or more away, and the tail light on said trailer was visible for at least one ordinary city block toward the rear."
Appellant insists as grounds for a reversal that certain of the findings are unsupported by, and, indeed, are contrary to, the evidence. The findings thus attacked may be briefly summarized as follows: First, that the truck became disabled and stopped without any negligence on the part of defendants; second, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and, third, that the leaving of the truck in the street was not the proximate cause of the collision. Appellant further urges that the court abused its discretion in refusing to allow her to introduce certain testimony as to the feasibility of moving the truck and trailer after the reopening of the case for the purpose of taking some additional evidence, and that a new trial should have been granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence.
The testimony as to the stopping of the truck and its presence in the street is uncontradicted and is substantially as follows: The truck and trailer, driven by one Case, who was in the employ of respondents, left Santa Barbara for Los Angeles about 10 o'clock of the day preceding the accident. It was returning empty, after delivering a load of waterpipe. When the truck left Los Angeles on its northerly trip the gasoline tank was filled to its capacity of thirty *278 gallons, and at Ventura, which is approximately sixty-five miles from Los Angeles, fifteen gallons more were added. On the return trip the fuel supply was again replenished at Ventura, and the tank contained twenty-five gallons when the truck left that city. This was the method ordinarily followed by Case and defendants' other driver engaged in heavy hauling between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, and on no previous occasion had a truck run out of gasoline. In fact, between five and ten gallons usually remained in the tanks on arrival back in Los Angeles. On this particular trip, however, the truck ran out of gasoline while proceeding along Sunset Boulevard, stopping quite suddenly at the point where, about five minutes later, the automobile in which appellant was riding crashed into it. There was no evidence as to any leakage from the gasoline tank, breakage of the gas line or other mechanical defect in or about the truck. It was equipped with a forced feed system, with an air gauge to indicate the pressure of gasoline flowing into the carbureter, and just prior to its stopping this gauge had registered a pressure of three pounds. The driver of the truck had no warning that it was about to run out of gasoline until it "just stopped all of a sudden . . . just like turning the switch off," and the air gauge "just went down in a second." The driver immediately set his brakes, the truck and trailer then being at the point hereinabove described. Here there is a slight grade downhill from east to west. The driver testified that it would have been impossible to have released the brake and allowed the truck to coast down and to the right hand or southerly curb, because "you can't steer your trailer," and that in order to bring the two vehicles to the curb the trailer would have had to be disengaged from the truck and manipulated by one man while another would have been required at the brakes "to keep the trailer from getting away."
[1] While there is some conflict in the evidence as to the presence of the driver at the scene of the accident and as to the tail-light on the rear of the trailer, the findings of the court as to these matters are amply supported by testimony that when the truck stopped the driver at once walked back "to make sure my lantern was lit" and that he found that it was and that the globe (it was a kerosene lantern with a red globe) was clean and that he remained *279 there up to the moment of the accident, flagging approaching cars with his arms. He further testified that he saw the car driven by appellant's friend when it was about two blocks away and "waved at him when he was half a block away," and that he was then going "faster than the other machines that came along there," and between thirty-five and forty miles per hour; also that the impact pushed the truck and trailer "ahead about three or four feet and jack-knifed" them. The truck driver also testified that he was expecting another truck and trailer, which was making the same trip with him, to come along and assist him, but that the driver of the other truck had taken a different route after arriving at Hollywood Boulevard and had gotten ahead of him, so that while this route also led by the scene of the collision his companion driver had passed it a few minutes prior to the arrival of the truck involved in the accident, which, as we have said, occurred about five minutes after the truck had stopped.
It is in evidence that at the time of the accident there was in effect an ordinance of the city of Los Angeles making it unlawful "for the operator of a vehicle to stand said vehicle . . . at any place in the roadway where the two right wheels of the vehicle are more than one foot distant from the regularly established curb line. . . ." If, in view of the testimony above summarized, we are to hold that the court was in error in its findings of lack of negligence on the part of respondents, we must do so on the theory that it is negligence as a matter of law for the operator of a motor vehicle to allow it to run out of fuel under any and all circumstances. This we are not prepared to do.
[2] Generally speaking, it is the duty of one driving a motor vehicle along a public highway to see that it is properly equipped so that it may be at all times controlled to the end that it be not a menace to the safety of others or of their property. The law requires that such a vehicle be equipped with brakes adequate to its quick stopping when necessary for the safety of its occupants or of others, and it is equally essential that it be maintained in such a condition as to mechanical efficiency and fuel supply that it may not become a menace to, or an obstruction of, other traffic by stopping on the road. But if the person in charge of such vehicle has done all that can be reasonably expected *280
of a person of ordinary prudence to see that his vehicle is in proper condition, and an unforeseen failure of a part of his equipment occurs, it does not necessarily follow that he must be deemed guilty of negligence as a matter of law. This view is well illustrated by the case of Giorgetti v. Wollaston,
[3] So in the present case we cannot say that the learned trial judge was unjustified in regarding the failure of respondents to maintain sufficient fuel in the truck's gasoline tank as excusable under the circumstances, bearing in mind that exactly the same procedure as to refilling the tank was followed as had been found sufficient on previous trips of the same and similar trucks over the same route. Whether gasoline had been syphoned from the tank by some thief while the driver was at dinner after taking on gas at Ventura, as suggested by respondents, is but a matter of speculation with no foundation in any of the evidence in the *282
record. The fact remains that the truck had reached its destination in Los Angeles on previous trips with several gallons unexpended. We do not think the law requires that the driver of a motor vehicle, who has seen to it that his car contains the amount of fuel which his past experience has found oversufficient for the journey in hand, should alight at intervals to examine his gasoline supply at the risk of being held guilty of negligence as a matter of law if he fails to discover that it is nearly exhausted. We are fortified in this line of reasoning by that of the opinion of the Supreme Court in Berkovitz v.American River Gravel Co.,
This case is not parallel with Keiper v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.,
We are satisfied that the court below committed no error in finding that respondents were not guilty of negligence.
[4] While our determination of the matter above considered must of necessity decide this appeal, we do not desire it to be understood that we approve of the trial court's finding on the subject of appellant's alleged contributory negligence. It is erroneous for two reasons: First, because there can properly be no finding that a plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence where the defendant has been found guilty of no primary negligence. The two are utterly inconsistent. Second, because in our opinion there is no evidence to support such a finding in this case.
Taking up the first of these reasons, we find that "contributory negligence" is defined as "such an act or omission on the part of the plaintiff, amounting to a want of *285
ordinary care, as concurring or cooperating with the negligentact of the defendant, is a proximate cause or occasion of the injury complained of." (Beach on Contributory Negligence, p. 7;Wardlaw v. California Ry. Co., 5 Cal. Unrep. 225 [42 P. 1075]; Gaster v. Hinkley,
[5] Furthermore, we find no evidence to support the finding. The plaintiff was a guest in Habecker's car, having no control or direction over its route or the manner of driving it. [6] The manifest negligence of Habecker in driving his car into the trailer equipped with a red lantern visible for an ordinary city block is not imputable to her. The facts disclosed by the record in this case are closely akin to those in the very recent case ofMarchetti v. Southern Pac. Co.,
[7] We deem the decision from which we have just quoted decisive on this point. The error in finding appellant guilty of contributory negligence is, however, immaterial in view of our conclusion that the finding as to non-negligence of the respondent is proper and controls the case on this appeal.
[8] Appellant urges that the court below abused its discretion "in refusing to allow plaintiff to show the truck and trailer could readily have been moved, after a reopening of the case to take certain additional testimony." It appears from the reporter's transcript that after the case was submitted it was upon motion of plaintiff reopened and the testimony of an alleged eye-witness to the accident was taken. No questions were propounded to this witness as to *288 the feasibility of moving the truck and trailer and the record does not show that any testimony whatever relating to this subject was offered by appellant or excluded by the court. This completely disposes of this point.
[9] Appellant next urges that a new trial should have been granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence. The affidavits in support of this motion are to the effect that appellant's counsel hired a truck and trailer similar to those involved in the accident, and by experimenting with them at the scene thereof determined that they could readily be backed to the curb, and hence that the testimony of the witness Case as to the impossibility of this maneuver was false. Apart from the fact that the affidavits failed to disclose facts showing that the evidence referred to therein could not have been discovered in time for presentation at the trial had appellant's counsel used due diligence in preparing the case, we are of the opinion that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for a new trial on the grounds stated. Newly discovered evidence, designed merely to impeach or contradict the testimony of adverse witnesses, is not a proper basis upon which to grant a new trial. (Waer v. Waer,
We deem it unnecessary to further prolong this opinion by discussion of the other points urged by appellant, as our views above expressed are determinative of this appeal.
Judgment affirmed.
Craig, Acting P.J., and Thompson (Ira F.), J., concurred.