210 P. 44 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment for two thousand five hundred dollars, rendered upon a verdict of a jury in an action by the heirs of Carmela Sanfilippo to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by them by reason of the negligence of defendants in operating an automobile, which negligence, it is alleged, resulted in the death of said Carmela Sanfilippo.
The complaint alleged that the defendants were husband and wife; that on the ninth day of July, 1919, said defendant Irving Lesser was the owner of a certain automobile which he purchased, possessed, and maintained for the comfort, pleasure, and enjoyment of himself and his wife, said defendant Ruth Lesser; that the said defendant Ruth Lesser on the ninth day of July, 1919, was allowed, permitted, and authorized by said Irving Lesser to use and operate said automobile for her pleasure, and that the said defendant Ruth Lesser was driving said automobile with the knowledge, consent, and authority of her said husband, and in pursuance of the purposes for which he bought, possessed, and maintained the same; that on said ninth day *88 of July, 1919, said defendant Ruth Lesser, with the consent and authority of said defendant Irving Lesser, drove and operated said automobile along said Ellsworth Street at a rate of speed of about thirty-five miles an hour, and while so doing failed and neglected to keep said automobile under control, with the result that she drove and operated the said automobile from the roadway of said street, upon and along the sidewalk thereof, and struck said Carmela Sanfilippo, who was then and there walking along the sidewalk of said street; that said automobile struck said Carmela Sanfilippo with great force and violence and that she thereby sustained injuries which caused her death.
A demurrer was interposed to the complaint upon the ground, among others, that it did not state a cause of action against the defendant Irving Lesser. The demurrer was overruled and answer filed, which denied, substantially, all the allegations of the complaint.
[1] There was absolutely no proof made by the plaintiff that the defendant Ruth Lesser was acting as the agent of Irving Lesser in driving the automobile. It was not disputed that the defendant Irving Lesser was not present at the scene of the accident, and he could be charged with the negligence, if any, of his wife only upon the theory of an agency between them. The burden of proof upon the issue of agency was on the plaintiff. (Fahey v. Madden,
Under this state of facts, the case is within the rule announced in the case of Spence v. Fisher,
[3] The instruction of the trial court to the jury that "if you find that the automobile in this case was owned by Irving Lesser and that the said Irving Lesser kept and maintained said automobile and authorized and permitted the use of it by his wife, Ruth Lesser, then and in that event Irving Lesser is liable in damages for any injury or death occasioned by the negligent operation of the said automobile by his said wife Ruth Lesser," was erroneous. The motion of the defendant Irving Lesser for a directed verdict should have been granted. The judgment against him cannot stand.
[4] As to the judgment against Ruth Lesser, numerous objections are urged, but a consideration of the first one called to our attention is decisive of this appeal. That is, that there is not a scintilla of evidence upon which the jury could arrive at an estimate of the pecuniary damages of the plaintiffs. The statute limits damages in a case like the present one to such an amount as under all the circumstances of the case may be just. (Sec.
In the case of Bond v. United Railroads, 159 Cal., at page 286 thereof [Ann. Cas. 1912C, 50, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 687,
The next witness was Constantina Mercurio. She described the accident, which she witnessed while sitting in her mother's store. She stated that deceased was her grandmother. Salvatore Sanfilippo testified that his mother was killed in the accident under consideration; that he lived in San Jose; that he arrived at the scene of the accident about twenty minutes after it occurred and examined the automobile; that his mother was fifty-three years old and his father was living.
This testimony includes all of the plaintiffs' case, and it appears therefrom that there is no evidence that Philipp Sanfilippo, the husband, was living with deceased at the *91 time of her death or that her society was of any pecuniary value to him or that she rendered any services to him. It appears that plaintiffs Mamie Mercurio and Salvatore Sanfilippo were married and did not reside with deceased. There is no evidence that they suffered the slightest pecuniary loss by her death. As to the minor child, seventeen years of age, there is also no evidence that she resided with her mother, and not the faintest suggestion that she suffered any pecuniary loss by her death. It is always to be borne in mind that no recovery can be had for grief, sorrow, and mental suffering of the heirs of deceased.
The unequivocal holding in the recent case ofParsons v. Easton,
In the absence of any evidence as to the mode of living of the deceased and the plaintiffs, and as to their relations and pecuniary advantage one to the other, there is no justification for the allowance of any damages, which must take account only of pecuniary loss. Because of this, the case must go back for a new trial.
[5] Respondents do not contend that there is any evidence justifying an award of damages, but seek refuge in the position that this court is precluded from examining that question because it is not specified as one of the particulars wherein the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict. While it is true that defendants did not specify that the evidence was insufficient in this particular, as they should have done (sec. 648, Code Civ. Proc.), they raised the same question in their objection to the giving of certain instructions by the trial court upon the question of the elements of damages that might be allowed by the jury. It is urged that these instructions were improperly given because there was no evidence upon that subject before the jury and instructions upon the matter, in the absence of any evidence, misled the jury into believing that a proper showing had been made by the plaintiffs, and that the court should not have instructed upon matters not touched upon by the evidence. This objection is urged upon appeal, and, in passing upon it, we are compelled to examine the record for evidence upon the question of damages, with the result heretofore stated. It is not the policy of the appellate courts of this state to foreclose substantial rights of appellants upon technical grounds where they are empowered to reach a decision in any manner upon the merits. We are of the opinion that the instructions complained of were improper *93 in view of the record, which contains no evidence sufficient to warrant an award of damages to plaintiffs. We must conclude that these instructions misled the jury into awarding damages because there is nothing in the evidence to explain the verdict.
There are numerous other matters urged by appellants for a reversal of the judgment, but they are not such matters as are likely to recur upon a new trial. It is, therefore, unnecessary to pass upon them in this opinion, as the judgment must be reversed as against both defendants for the reasons mentioned herein. It is so ordered.
Nourse, J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.