Opinion
Oscar Rivera filed against Southern Pacific Railroad and related parties (hereafter Southern Pacific) a complaint for compensatory damages. The complaint alleged that Rivera suffered permаnent and disabling injuries when he fell from a train in Southern Pacific’s railroad yard located in Yuma, Arizona.
Southern Pacific moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the action was precluded by California Civil Code section 1714.7, the so-cаlled “train hopping statute.” The superior court granted the motion and ordered summary judgment entered. Rivera appeals from the order entering summary judgment.
Appeal From Order for Entry of Summary Judgment
An order granting a motion for summary judgment is not an appeal-able order. Where, as here, judgment has in fact been entered, this court is empowered to honor the appeal as one taken from the judgment itself.
(Crookham
v.
Smith
(1977)
Facts
The relevant facts are taken from Rivera’s deposition. Rivera and others were in the habit of traveling from Yuma, Arizona to Los Angeles by hiding *298 underneath automobiles carried on train cars. On the night in question, Rivera had consumed approximately one and one-half bottles of wine and had taken three “neo percodan” prior to going to the railroad yard. He asked a man who was switching cars from one track to another which track would carry the train to Los Angeles. The man indicated that the train would be on the last track and would be there within five or ten minutes. Rivera hid in some bushes and, when the train approached, climbed onto a slowly moving car. He slipped from the car and was pulled under it when he tried to push himself up by standing on one of the wheels. He lost both legs.
Application of California Law
The injuries occurred in Arizona. Rivera, however, alleging that he was at all times relevant a California citizen, brought the action in California. The relevant rules are stated in
Offshore Rental Co.
v.
Continental Oil Co.
(1978)
Civil Codе section 1714.7 provides, “No person who is injured while getting on, or attempting to get on, a moving locomotive or railroad car, without authority from the owner or operator of the railroad, or who, having gotten on a locomotive or railroad car while in motion without such authority, is injured while so riding or getting off, shall recover any damages from the owner or operator thereof for such injuries unless proximately caused by an intentional act of such owner or operator with knowledge that serious injury is the probable result of such act, or with a wanton and reckless disregard of the probable result of such act.”
Arizona has no comparable statute. Its сase law, however, has established that a railroad owes no duty to a trespasser “except not to wilfully or wantonly injure him after discovering his peril.”
(Barry
v.
Southern Pac. Co.
(1946)
*299 Accordingly, there is no true conflict of law and California, as the forum state, is entitled to apply its own law.
Effect of Civil Code Section 1714.7 on Rivera’s Claim
Rivera opposed the motion for summary judgment on the grounds (1) that he had not boarded a moving train and (2) that he had been authorized by Southern Pacific to board the train.
Rivera’s first argument was based on an answer to interrogatories filed several months after his deposition. In his answer, contradicting his deposition testimony that the train was moving as he boarded, he stated, “At the time that I climbed aboard the train the locomotive engine was running. However, the train was not actually moving at that instant. Both immediately before and immediately after I climbеd on the train, the train did move very slowly backwards and forwards.”
We find that the trial court properly determined there was no issue of fact as to whether the train was stationary when boarded by Rivera.
In his deposition, appellant admitted that at the time he boarded the train it was moving. This admission raised the bar of Civil Code section 1714.7. Where a party makes an admission or concession during discovery, the trial court is entitled to find no triable issue as to the fact conceded. “As the law recognizes in other contexts (see Evid. Code, §§ 1220-1230) admissions against interest have a very high credibility value. This is especially true when, as in this case, the admission is obtained not in the normal course of human activities and affairs but in the context of an established pretrial procedure whose purpose is to elicit facts. Accordingly, when such an admission becomes relevant to the determination, on motion for summary judgment, оf whether or not there exist triable issues of
fact
(as opposed to legal issues) between the parties, it is entitled to and should receive a kind of deference not normally accorded evidentiary allegations in affidаvits.”
(D’Amico
v.
Board of Medical Examiners
(1974)
In his subsequent answers to interrogatories, appellant stated that the train was moving both immediately before and after he boarded it, but was not actually moving at the instant he boarded. The issue thus presented is whether a party сan rely on contradictions in his own testimony to create a triable issue of fact and thereby defeat a summary judgment motion. When the defendant can establish an absolute defense from the plaintiff’s admissions, “the credibility of the admissions are valued so highly that the controverting affidavits may be disregarded as irrelevant, inadmissible or
*300
evasive.”
(Leasman
v.
Beech Aircraft Corp.
(1975)
Thus, thе conflict in appellant’s statements is insufficient to constitute evidence substantial enough to create a triable issue of fact because his credibility had been destroyed by the prior admission.
(Hoover Community Hotel Development Corp.
v.
Thomson
(1985)
Moreover, apрellant’s answers to the interrogatories did not raise a triable issue of fact sufficient to defeat respondent’s motion for summary judgment. Appellant seeks to exclude from the application of Civil Code section 1714.7 injuries incurred while hopping trains which have momentarily stopped. Reading the statute in light of Penal Code section 587b, which makes train hopping a misdemeanor, it is evident that the purpose of the statute is to prevent liability wherе the railroad company is not easily able to ascertain if unauthorized persons have boarded the train. (See
Durham
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1979)
Our reading of the statute is in accord with the common law rulе against liability for train hopping. “Here the danger was obvious, that of moving railroad trains. No adult in possession of his faculties could claim nondiscovery of the danger or nonrealization of the unreasonable risk which entering the area, or intermeddling, would entail.”
(Gutirrez
v.
Southern
*301
Pacific Co.
(1959)
Further, there is nothing in the conversation between Rivera and the man switching trains to support Rivera’s argument that he authorized Rivera to boаrd the train. The man simply told him which track it would be on. Authorization is not the same as noninterference. Moreover, Civil Code section 1714.7 specifies that authorization may be given only by the owner or operator of the train. The switchman clearly was neither the actual owner nor the operator of the railroad. His ability to authorize Rivera’s act, therefore, depends upon whether or not he might be characterized as Southern Pacific’s agent. An agency relation results “from the act of one person, the principal, who authorizes another, the agent, to conduct one or more transactions with one or more third persons and to exerсise a degree of discretion in effecting the principal’s purpose.”
(Lombardo
v.
Santa Monica Young Men's Christian Assn.
(1985)
There are no facts to indicate that the man at issue was anything more than an employee of Southern Pacific or that he had the authоrity to permit persons to ride a train. The facts showed him to be nothing more than a switchman. The trial court correctly determined that Rivera had alleged no fact indicating he was authorized to board the train.
Rivera arguеd that authorization could be implied from the fact that persons often hopped trains from the Yuma railroad yard and that there were no signs indicating that train hopping was prohibited, nor did anyone actively interfere with the practice. Again, there is a distinction between noninterference and authorization. Further, Civil Code section 1714.7 was enacted to protect railroads from the burdens inherent in monitoring trains to ensure that no unauthorized person is riding them.
(Dur
*302
ham
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Newsom, Acting P. J., and Holmdahl, J., concurred.
