142 P. 109 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained as a result of the negligence of defendants in operating an automobile which collided with a motorcycle upon which plaintiff was riding on Ninth Street in the city of Los Angeles.
At the close of the evidence the jury, under direction of the trial court, returned a verdict for defendants. The appeal is from the judgment and an order denying plaintiff's motion for a new trial.
The collision occurred at a point where Ninth Street, which extends east and west, intersects an alley nineteen feet and seven inches wide, extending north and south. According to plaintiff's testimony, he was engaged as a gardener and about 9 o'clock A. M. on January 19th, having completed his work, he mounted his motorcycle at a point on the west side of the alley disant one hundred and fifty feet north of its intersection with Ninth Street and, without using the power but pedaling the machine, started toward Ninth Street, traveling at a speed of less than five miles per hour. He was on the west side of the alley and as he neared Ninth Street kept within two or three feet of the west line thereof. As he approached Ninth Street he looked on both sides of the alley where it opened into Ninth Street and saw a gravel wagon on Ninth Street approaching from the east toward the alley, the heads of the horses drawing the wagon being distant six or seven feet from the east line thereof, and another wagon which had passed the alley going west. Although he looked, he saw no automobile and, though he listened, heard no horn or other warning of its approach. He passed out of the alley in front of the gravel wagon, immediately after which defendants' automobile, traveling west on Ninth Street, struck the left side of the front wheel of plaintiff's motorcycle, throwing him down, as a result of which he was seriously injured. When thrown down he immediately jumped up to see the automobile, and saw it pass over Burlington Avenue. He did not lose consciousness and had full possession of his faculties from the time of the collision until removed in the ambulance; he saw the automobile the instant before it struck him and turned the handle-bars of his motorcycle to the right, thus changing his course, in an effort to avoid the collision; after being struck he got up, but fell down again; he watched *678
the speeding automobile until it reached Burlington Avenue, the street next west of the alley; he had attended automobile school, qualified as a driver and knew and had estimated their speed within one-half mile per hour. A city ordinance was introduced which limited the speed of and made it unlawful for any one to operate an automobile at the point where the collision occurred at a speed in excess of twenty miles per hour. Thereupon he was asked the question: "Can you estimate the speed at which that automobile was traveling at the time that it struck you?" to which an objection, upon the ground that it was incompetent and immaterial and no foundation laid as to the estimate, was by the court sustained on the ground, as stated, "that from the testimony of the witness already given it is impossible for him to make the estimate." He was further asked: "Now, Shimoda, what was the speed of the automobile at the time that you first saw it?" to which the court sustained an objection. He was again asked: "What speed was the automobile going in miles per hour at the time it struck you" to which defendants' objection, upon the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and no proper foundation laid, was sustained. Thereafter plaintiff offered to prove by the witness that, from seeing the automobile at the time it struck him and immediately prior thereto and thereafter, and as he saw it afterwards while being run to Burlington Avenue, he could and did form an estimate of the speed in miles per hour at which it was running, and that at the time it collided with his motorcycle it was running at a speed of from thirty to forty miles per hour. The court refused to permit him to so testify. This ruling of the court is assigned as error. Counsel for respondents attempt to justify the same upon the well-recognized rule that whether or not one be qualified to testify as an expert is a question of fact to be determined by the trial court, whose decision will not be disturbed unless error clearly appears; in reply to which it may be said that the witness was not called as an expert. No question other than the speed of a moving object was involved, as to which any intelligent person accustomed to observing moving objects would be able to express an opinion of some value. The rule, as to which there is little conflict and applicable alike not only to automobiles, but to all moving objects, is that a person of ordinary intelligence, *679
having opportunity for observation, is competent to testify as to the speed at which an automobile is being operated at a given time. (Wolfe v. Ives,
Max Spaeny, called as a witness on behalf of plaintiff, testified that he saw the collision when the automobile struck the front of the motorcycle, knocking plaintiff off and down, and watched the automobile until it went up to Burlington Avenue; that plaintiff after being knocked down tried to get up, but being unable to do so, raised his head and looked steadily after the automobile; that he was in the alley as plaintiff passed him going out. This witness testified that he was unable to determine or estimate the speed at which the automobile was running, but for the purpose of showing the speed at which it was operated at the time of the collision the witness was permitted, without objection being interposed thereto, to testify that at the time of the collision the automobile was running at about the same speed as a car operated over the same street and at the same place, the speed of which he had witnessed a few days before the trial, and testimony was then offered to show that this car with which the witness had compared the speed of defendants' automobile was at the time operated at an actual speed of 27 1/2 miles per hour. It is conceded the testimony given by the chauffeur in charge of the car contradicted the evidence adduced on behalf of plaintiff as to every material issue. He testified that he knew of and was familiar with the location of this alley and knew that it was used as a thoroughfare by people using wagons, motorcycles and other vehicles; that as he approached the point on Ninth Street intersecting the alley his view thereof was obstructed by a wagon loaded with hay, over the top of which he could not see, and which with the team drawing the same extended across seven-eighths of the mouth thereof; that he was looking at his speedometer and was running at a speed of only fifteen miles per hour and did not see plaintiff or know that he had struck him until feeling a jar from the collision he stopped his car within eight feet of the point where the collision occurred, and looking back saw plaintiff lying in the street. *681
The question presented is whether or not under this evidence the court was warranted in taking the case from the jury and directing a verdict for defendants. In the late case ofEstate of Baldwin,
There was introduced in evidence a city ordinance requiring all motorcycles to be registered and numbered. This ordinance provided that every owner of a motorcycle should file in the office of the city clerk a statement in writing showing the name and address of such person, description of the motorcycle, name and maker thereof, and factory number, and that the city clerk should issue to him a metal seal, approximately two inches in diameter, upon which should be stamped, "Registered Motorcycle No. ___, City of Los Angeles," with the registration number inserted therein, which seal was required to be conspicuously displayed upon the motorcycle to which it was assigned. Section 4 of the ordinance made it unlawful for any person to operate a motorcycle upon the streets unless the registration seal and number belonging thereto was displayed thereon as required by the ordinance. Section 5 provided that "it shall be unlawful for any person . . . to use or operate, . . . any motorcycle . . . upon or in any public street or thoroughfare, unless the owner thereof shall have complied in all respects with this ordinance." For violation of the provisions of the ordinance the offender was made subject to punishment by fine or imprisonment, or both. It is conceded that plaintiff did not file a statement with the city clerk, nor procure the registration of his motorcycle, as required by the provisions of the ordinance. Respondents insist that by reason of such neglect and failure on the part of plaintiff to comply with the ordinance, and even though it be conceded that the negligence of defendants was the direct and proximate cause of the damage sustained by him, he is not entitled to recover therefor. This contention is based upon the theory that, since the ordinance made it unlawful for him to operate the motorcycle, he was, as to defendants and the city, a trespasser upon the street, to whom defendants owed no duty other than to refrain from willfully or wantonly injuring him or his property. This view finds support *683
in the case of Dudley v. Northampton Street R. Co.,
The judgment and order are reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on July 31, 1914. *685