291 P. 978 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment rendered against them in an action *352 brought by the surviving widow and children of Frank Henry Simmons to recover damages on account of the death of the said Frank Henry Simmons, who was struck and instantly killed by an automobile driven by one of the employees of the defendants. The court, sitting without a jury, awarded plaintiffs a judgment in the sum of three thousand dollars.
Appellants contend that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings, and that the court erred in admitting certain evidence. There is no merit in either of appellants' points.
[1] The evidence in many respects is conflicting, but there is ample proof in the record to support the findings of the trial court that the deceased met his death through the negligence of the driver of the automobile. The accident occurred on January 4, 1918, at about the hour of 7 o'clock in the evening, at or near the intersection of Seventh and Ceres Streets, in the city of Los Angeles. The automobile at the time of the accident was being operated as a stage between San Diego and Los Angeles, and was on the in-bound trip going toward Los Angeles. Seventh Street runs east and west, and upon it there is constructed the double tracks of the street-car company. Ceres Street runs north and south and intersects Seventh Street. There is a slight jog in Ceres Street where it intersects Seventh Street, the northerly intersection being a short distance to the east of the southerly intersection. The deceased, Simmons, a carpenter by occupation, lived near said intersection. During the evenings he was employed as doorkeeper at a moving picture theater located on Seventh Street near the northwest corner of Seventh and Ceres Streets. On the evening of the accident Simmons, who was sixty-four years of age and in full possession of all his faculties, started straight across Seventh Street, in a direction which, if he had succeeded in crossing the street, would have brought him immediately in the front of the theater and only a few feet west of the most westerly line of Ceres Street. According to the testimony of disinterested eye-witnesses, Simmons, before starting across the street, stood near the curb and looked to his left for approaching vehicles which might be traveling down the right side of Seventh Street. The street was clear and he started to cross, and when he reached a *353 point between the north-bound and south-bound street-car tracks he stopped and looked to the left and then to the right, and observing the approach of the automobile stage from his right, remained stationary to allow the stage to pass in front of him. The stage at the time was traveling westwardly on the north side of Seventh Street, with the left wheels running on or a little to the north of the farthest northerly rail of the street-car track. When the stage reached a point about forty or fifty feet from where Simmons had stopped the driver of the stage changed his course slightly to the left, which brought Simmons directly in front of the rapidly moving stage, and before Simmons could get out of the way he was struck by the stage and killed. The stage proceeded some forty feet before it was stopped. The headlights of the stage were lighted at the time, and several witnesses estimated the speed of the machine immediately prior to the impact to be upward of twenty-five miles an hour. It was fully shown that had the stage continued in the straight direction in which it was traveling before the driver deviated its course it would entirely have cleared Simmons. Some of the witnesses testified that the horn was not sounded and others that it was.
The driver of the stage claims, and it is the theory of appellants on this appeal, that Simmons was proceeding across the street with his head down and his hat drawn down over his eyes, looking neither to the right nor to the left, and that as the driver of the stage endeavored to pass Simmons to the left and behind him, Simmons stepped back in front of the machine, and the impact was inevitable.
At best, this testimony raised a mere conflict, and in that state of the record the well-established rule is that the conclusions of the lower court will not be disturbed. (Holroyd v. Gray Taxi Co.,
The court found and the evidence shows that there was a space of over fifteen feet of open clear roadway on either side of Simmons through which the stage could have passed without colliding with him, and Simmons could be seen for a considerable distance down Seventh Street. Under such circumstances it cannot be said that the accident was unavoidable. (Irwin v. Golden State Auto Touring Corp., *354
[2] The court did not err in admitting certain evidence, as complained of by appellants. The declarations of the stage driver made subsequent to the accident were stricken out by the court on motion of appellants, and it can hardly be presumed, as appellants contend, that the court allowed itself to be influenced by such evidence, particularly in view of the fact that doubts were expressed by the court as to the admissibility of the proof when it was offered. [3] If it was error at all to admit in evidence the traffic ordinance of the city of Los Angeles, it was harmless, for the reason that the rate of speed at which the stage was traveling at the time of the accident was also in violation of the state law, and the decision of the trial court was not based alone upon the evidence of excessive speed but was also founded upon the negligent operation of the stage by the driver, which was in violation of the law of negligence as declared in the Civil Code (sec. 1714).
We are of the opinion that the judgment of the trial court is correct, and, finding no error in the record, the judgment is, therefore, affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Richards, J., concurred.