117 P. 956 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1911
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *641 The action was brought by Robert Francis Spear to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him as the result of a collision between an east-bound car of said railroad and a wagon of Wells, Fargo Company going in the same direction, the horses thereby becoming frightened and crashing into the wagon which said Spear was driving in an opposite direction, throwing him to the ground and severely injuring him. A general verdict against both defendants was rendered by a jury. There were also findings upon certain special issues, which were submitted at the request of the defendants. Plaintiff consented to a reduction of $1,500 from the amount of the verdict in accordance with a conditional order of the trial court on the motion for a new trial, and thereupon said motion was denied. In the meantime *642 said Robert Francis Spear had died and his executrix was substituted as plaintiff in the cause.
The following may be stated as embracing the material facts of the case: On April 17, 1906, the said Robert Francis Spear was driving a regular mill wagon on the north side of Bryant street, in San Francisco, in a westerly direction toward Oak Grove avenue, which is a short street midway between Fifth and Sixth streets. The United Railroads owns and operates a double track line of electric cars on Bryant street and the south wheels of Spear's wagon were in the center of the two rails of the north track. At the same time, Thomas McCourtney, an employee of Wells, Fargo Company, was driving a second size rack wagon, which is a wagon with slats on top, down Bryant street from Sixth street in an easterly direction. The south wheels of his wagon were between the north rail of the south track and the south rail of the north track, and the north wheels were between the two rails of the north track. The position of the wagon was such that it would not have been struck by a car passing it on the south track. Without either looking or listening for an approaching car, the driver of Wells, Fargo Company's wagon changed his course by starting to drive toward and upon the south track as a car was approaching thereon behind said wagon. The track was clear of obstructions until the express wagon changed its course. About the same time that the driver turned toward and upon said south track the collision occurred between his wagon and the car, causing the injury as aforesaid. Each defendant has appealed on a separate record from the judgment and the order denying its motion for a new trial, but we deem it advisable to consider in one opinion the appeals of both defendants. Each defendant seeks to exculpate itself and inculpate the other. In fact, the trial seems largely to have been a contest between the two defendants as to which was liable for the injury, it being conceded by each that a sufficient showing was made against the other to entitle plaintiff to recover.
Oscar Bargewell, the conductor on the car, was called as a witness by appellant, and in his direct examination he testified as to his recollection of the immediate circumstances surrounding the accident. On cross-examination, after stating that Herman was the name of the motorman, he was asked: "How long had he been on the road?" The question was objected to on the general ground and also that it was not cross-examination and outside of the issues. The objection was overruled and the answer received, "About three or four weeks." Over like objections he was permitted to answer quite a number of questions along the same line and finally he was asked this question: "But as to where he was broken in, or how many days he was broken in, or what runs he made, you only know that from hearsay, don't you?" and he answered, "That is all." Appellant then moved to strike out this testimony "as to that matter except what occurred when he appeared in the car-house." The motion was denied, the court saying: "I cannot strike out the testimony about breaking the man in to the duties of the position. What do you want to strike out?" Counsel replied: "His testimony as to the number of runs he had made and the time occupied in breaking him in." The motion was again denied, whereupon counsel for appellant said: "I want to strike out that there was one week of instruction and two weeks of experience," and as to this the motion was thereupon granted. As admitted by appellant, there was thereby much of the objectionable testimony removed from the consideration of the jury but the following questions and answers remained: "Q. How long had he been on the road? A. About three or four weeks. Q. It was his first trip on that car? A. Yes, sir. Q. During the three weeks that he had worked for the company, was he not being educated to the work of a motorman? A. Yes, sir." It is indisputable that said questions *644
were not within the limits of proper cross-examination, and they should not have been allowed for the additional reason that they concerned the experience and competency of the motorman. The purpose of the interrogatories was, clearly, to impress the jury with the fact of the inexperience and incompetency of the motorman in order that they might more readily reach the conclusion that the accident was due to his negligence. The evidence would naturally have weight with the jury. The effect of the testimony would be the same as though the witness had been allowed to declare that the motorman was without experience and training in the duties of his position. Such evidence is held to have no relevant bearing upon the issue, which is, Was the motorman negligent at the particular time of the occurrence in controversy? The rule is stated in section 65 of Wigmore on Evidence as follows: "A few courts have shown an inclination to admit, exceptionally, the character of a person charged with a negligent act (contributory negligence of a plaintiff) as throwing light on the probability of his having acted carelessly on the occasion in question; provided that the other evidence leaves the matter in great doubt, or that the other evidence is purely circumstantial, or (as sometimes put) that there are no eyewitnesses testifying. The mainstay of this exception doctrine seems to have been the obiter suggestion in Tenney v.Tuttle, 1 Allen, 185. Such evidence is no doubt likely to be of some probative value in such cases, and under the above limitations is hardly contrary to the ordinary policy of avoiding confusion of issues. As a matter of law, however, the doctrine is maintained in a few jurisdictions only, and has been expressly repudiated in many." The exceptional doctrine has been repudiated in this state. (Towle v. PacificImprovement Co.,
Henry Coffman, a witness called by Wells, Fargo Company, was near the scene of the accident, and, after stating that the car struck the wagon the second time, he was asked: "Whereabouts?" His answer was: "It hit it along about the front wheel, and that knocked Wells-Fargo's driver off his seat; and it was shoving the wagon along, and then I jumped out in the street and told the motorman to shut off his power and stop the car." Appellant moved "to strike out what the witness told the motorman." The motion was denied. The witness afterward stated that "the power was not off then." When asked upon cross-examination: "Then how could you say that the motorman did not turn off the *646
power?" the witness answered: "I do not know, unless it was the rapid rate of speed that he was going at." Being further asked: "So it is a conclusion on your part, is it, from the rapid rate of speed he was going?" he answered: "Yes, sir." The motion was then made "to strike out all of the testimony of the witness showing that the motorman did not turn off the power." The court, after asking this question, "Could that speed have been maintained for that distance if no power was on?" and eliciting the answer, "No, sir," denied the motion. It is clear that what the witness told the motorman was not responsive to the question and it was manifestly hearsay. The declaration of the witness that the motorman had not turned off the power was undoubtedly not the expression of an opinion on a matter of expert testimony, but it constituted the inference of a fact drawn by the witness from other facts not involving any special skill or training "in any science, art or trade," but within the common observation of all men. The proposition is so simple as to need probably the citation of no authority. However, appellant has furnished us two cases to which we may briefly refer. In Alabama etc. Ry. Co. v. Burgess,
We think appellant is wrong in the contention that "the court erred in permitting the witnesses of the defendant, Wells, Fargo Company, to testify as to negligence on the part of the defendant United Railroads of San Francisco." The basis of the claim is twofold: first, that there is no allegation in the answer of the defendant Wells, Fargo Company as to negligence on the part of its codefendant the United Railroads, and secondly, that "where two defendants are charged as being concurrently negligent, the negligence of one defendant is no defense to the other." (29 Cyc. 487; Shearman Redfield on Negligence, sec. 31.)
It is true that in the answer of Wells, Fargo Company there is no affirmative allegation of the negligence of the railroad, but in said answer there is no denial of the averments in the complaint as to the United Railroads' negligence. It should not be held necessary for the company to repeat the allegation which has been made by the plaintiff and which, by declining to deny, Wells, Fargo Company has in effect averred. Manifestly, concurrent negligence is inconsistent with sole and exclusive negligence. The allegation of the former, however, does not preclude one of the parties, who has denied any negligence on his own part, from introducing evidence having a tendency to show that the accident was due solely to the negligence of the other party. That, no doubt, was the purpose of the testimony of which complaint is made. Without reviewing it we may say, however, that it rather supports the theory of concurrent negligence, and, therefore, the latter objection of appellant is without merit. But, regardless of these suggestions, the evidence was within the issues made by the pleadings, it was directly in support of plaintiff's allegations against appellant, and it would be a harsh rule that would demand a reversal of a just judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sole reason that legal evidence was offered by a codefendant rather than by plaintiff himself.
Thomas McCourtney, the said driver for the express company, on redirect examination, was interrogated as follows: "Q. You turned out for a ear between Seventh and Eighth *649
streets. Did that car give you warning?" The court overruled an objection to the question that it was "incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and not connected with this transaction." The objection, we think, should have been sustained. What was done by another motorman, on another car, at another time, would have no relevancy to the issue whether the motorman on the occasion in controversy here was chargeable with negligence. Respondent does not seriously defend the ruling, but she invokes the doctrine that the admission of irrelevant evidence is not ground for reversal when it appears to be of slight consequence. (Hudson v. Hudson,
Appellant complains of this instruction: "If you should believe from the evidence that the driver of Wells, Fargo
Company was guilty of negligence in driving too near, or upon, the track of the railroad company, but you should also believe from the evidence that the motorman of the car of the railroad company was aware of the dangerous situation of the express wagon, and that the motorman had a clear opportunity, by the exercise of proper care, to have avoided the collision, but negligently failed to do so, and as a direct consequence of such negligence plaintiff was injured, then your verdict, if in favor of plaintiff, should be against the United Railroads of San Francisco alone and in favor of Wells, Fargo Company." The instruction seeks to apply what is familiarly known as the "last clear chance" doctrine and is admittedly a correct statement of that rule. It is *650
contended, however, that it has no application to a case like this where two parties are charged with separate and concurrent negligence. The discussion of this question may be deferred till we reach the consideration of the special findings of the jury. It is sufficient to say, now, that the instruction could not possibly have prejudiced appellant. The only objection to the instruction is — not that it fails to state the law correctly as far as appellant's liability is concerned, or that there was no evidence justifying it — but that the hypothesis assumed does not necessarily exonerate Wells, Fargo Company from actionable negligence. The answer is, of course, that the jury either disregarded the objectionable portion, or else rejected the whole of the instruction as not pertinent to the facts shown by the evidence. This is demonstrated by their action in finding a verdict against Wells, Fargo Company as well as against appellant. For like reason we attach no decisive significance to the apparent conflict between this instruction and the direction given by the court in response to an inquisitive juror as follows: "Q. In case the jurors think from the evidence that both were negligent, but that one was more negligent than the other, how about such a case? The Court: If you should find that the negligence of both parties jointly and concurrently — that is, both together — caused the result, then they would both be liable. If they both assisted by their negligence in producing the result, they would be jointly liable." It is not disputed that the rule is that the jury are bound to accept all the propositions of law as given them by the court for their guidance, and if the instructions on a material point are repugnant and contradictory, it is usually impossible for the jury to decide which to follow, and after the verdict it is equally difficult to determine that they were not influenced by the one that was erroneous. (Sappenfield v. Main St. Ry.,
The court refused to give the following instruction requested by appellant: "I instruct you that when the negligence of the injured party contributes to the injuries complained of, the law will afford no redress, and if, therefore, you find in this case that the plaintiff was negligent and such negligence contributed to the injuries complained of, I instruct you that he cannot recover against either of the defendants. In order to avoid injury to himself, the plaintiff was bound to have exercised reasonable care to avoid the same, and he was bound to use such care and diligence as a reasonable and prudent man would have exercised under like circumstances." It is not denied that this is a correct statement of the rule of contributory negligence, and that this defense was pleaded in appellant's answer, but the court's action is sought to be justified on the ground that there was no evidence whatever that plaintiff failed in any respect to exercise reasonable care and diligence. Of course, if there was any substantial evidence from which the jury might have concluded that the plaintiff was negligent, it was error for the court to refuse the instruction. While we are entirely satisfied that it cannot be held, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and while we may go further and say that the most reasonable view is that he was entirely free from fault, yet we think it must be said that the question is open to candid disputation, and therefore a proper one to submit to the jury. As we have seen, the plaintiff was driving his team up the street on one car track; the express wagon was coming down the street between the two tracks and as it turned out to pass the plaintiff it was struck by a car from behind. The circumstances shown by the evidence, which seem to point the instruction, are related by appellant as follows: "The plaintiff might have gotten his team out of the way and thus have avoided the accident. The road in front of him was clear. He saw the car coming from the time it left Sixth street. He saw the express wagon start to cross to the right between sixty and two hundred feet away and said 'he is going to get it.' He saw the car coming in time to holler to the driver of the express wagon. When he saw Wells-Fargo's *652 wagon coming he pulled to one side. The car hit the wagon two hundred feet away from him. He could have turned in between the outside track and the sidewalk. He had passed the junk wagons before he came near Wells-Fargo's wagon. He did not think anything was going to happen, and was going along as usual because he thought he could stop the car quick enough. He did not look for trouble. He tried to get out of the road. The street was clear beyond the junk wagon. The plaintiff did not stop his wagon nor make any effort to stop it. There is nothing to interfere with the plaintiff going up the north side of the street." It is quite rare that the court should not submit to the jury, under proper instructions, the question of contributory negligence, and we think there was some room here for the application of the doctrine.
We think the refusal of the court to give the proposed instruction containing a caution against the undue influence of sympathy and an exhortation to regard the law with equal favor toward the corporation and the individual was not prejudicially erroneous. Such an instruction has been given in many cases and no one would deny that it embodies a just principle. InBochert v. Lehigh Coal etc. Co.,
The proposed instruction as to the manner in which the testimony of witnesses generally should be viewed was sufficiently covered by instruction No. 2, given at the request of plaintiff.
Appellant requested the court to give the following instruction: "It is not the duty of a motorman to ring his bell or gong, except to give the usual signal for starting, and except when his car is about to cross an intersecting street. There was therefore no duty imposed upon the motorman to ring his bell or gong between Oak Grove avenue and Fifth street, and if he failed to do so such failure did not of itself constitute negligence." The request was based upon Ordinance No. 1380 of the city and county of San Francisco, providing that "It is not the duty of a motorman to ring his bell or gong, except to give the usual signal for starting, and except when his car is about to cross an intersecting street." The argument is that, in view of this law, it would be negligence per se for the motorman to fail to ring the bell or gong at starting or at a crossing but not at any other time, in accordance with the principle announced in Schmidt v. St. Louis Ry. Co., 163 Mo. 645, [63 S.W. 834], wherein it is declared: "There is no statute making it the duty of the gripman to sound the gong or bell at the approach of a street crossing, and there is no law making a failure to do so negligence per se. Such failure becomes negligence only when the circumstances render the ringing of the bell necessary, and, if the circumstances are in dispute, whether the occasion is such as calls for the sounding of the bell, it is a question of fact for the jury." There is no doubt that the instruction related to one of the vital points in the case, and, since it might be plausibly contended from some of the evidence that the failure to ring the bell was not negligence, the instruction, we think, should have been given. The rule is as stated in People v. Taylor,
The court might well have given the requested instruction: "If any witness examined before you has willfully sworn falsely as to any material matter, it is your duty to distrust his entire testimony." (People v. Stevens,
Certain other instructions, hypothetical in character and covering appellant's theory of the facts, were also requested and refused. It cannot be said that they are inconsistent with every rational inference from the evidence, but we think they were substantially covered by the instructions which were given by the court.
There is no inconsistency, in our opinion, between the special findings and the general verdict. The phraseology of some of the questions submitted to the jury is open to criticism but we can see therein no prejudicial error. The rule is as stated in Antonian v. Southern Pacific Co.,
It is also claimed that the foregoing special issue, designated "c," "assumes as a fact that the wagon was in a position which was dangerous, and such that the car could have been slowed down and the collision avoided had it been seen by the motorman in time." This goes to the form of the interrogatory, and the objection should have been made at the *656 time the issues were submitted. Besides, while it does assume that the wagon was in a dangerous position, it is not prejudicial to assume what no one can dispute. While the question is somewhat complex, it left to the jury to determine whether the motorman actually saw the dangerous position of the wagon and whether, after seeing it, he could have avoided the collision.
We think it too clear for argument that appellant has no cause for complaint that the said special issues were submitted to the jury at the instance of Wells, Fargo Company rather than on the request of plaintiff.
We think there is no merit in the contention that a new trial should have been granted, for the reason "that the evidence was insufficient to show that the plaintiff's loss of voice was a result of the injuries alleged to have been caused by the defendant, United Railroads." As pointed out by respondent, Dr. Barbat testified that "Mr. Spear contracted bronchitis as a direct result of the accident and lost his voice as a direct result of the bronchitis," and Dr. Toner testified that "the injuries sustained by the plaintiff resulted in his present loss of voice." And while, as to the negligence of appellant, the case is a close one, we think it cannot be said that there is an entire absence of evidence in any respect to support the verdict.
The ruling of a lower court, it may be observed, upon the motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, is very rarely interfered with by an appellate tribunal. The matter is largely left to the discretion of the trial judge, he being the judge of the value and effect of the evidence, and the rule is not to interfere with his decision except in case of manifest abuse. It must be admitted, though, that appellant here made an exceptionally strong showing upon this ground, and it is difficult to resist the conclusion that the motion should have been granted. Harry Herman, who was the motorman at the time of the collision, was not present at the trial. In the language of appellant, "There can be no question of the sufficiency of the showing as to why this witness was not produced. All of the accident records of the United Railroads were destroyed in the fire (the great fire of April 18, 1906). The filing of the complaint was the first information that the defendant United Railroads had of *657 the accident. The names of the conductor and motorman were not learned until sixteen days before the trial, and the motorman was not located until after the trial, although every effort had been made to ascertain these facts. The whole of the plaintiff's case, as far as this defendant is concerned, consists of the testimony of various witnesses as to the facts and failure to act of the motorman. The testimony of the motorman as to these facts, although cumulative, is nevertheless of so overwhelming a character, as to render a different result probable, not so much because of the testimony itself, but because it would be the testimony of the actor, and therefore of infinitely greater probative value." Of course, it harmonizes with common observation and experience that "probability of a higher degree of attention and interest gives rise to a presumption of considerable force that a person's recollection of his act and of attendant circumstances is more definite and trustworthy than another person's recollection of it; especially if it was an act done in the performance of a duty or if the other person's testimony is little more than an expression of opinion or judgment." (Moore on Facts, sec. 783.) Ordinarily, the court is justified in looking with suspicion upon newly discovered evidence, but this case seems to be out of the ordinary. The facts recited in Herman's affidavit entirely negative any implication of negligence on the part of appellant, and, while a jury might not give full faith to his testimony, it appears just that appellant should have the privilege of affording them the opportunity to do so.
But aside from the foregoing somewhat technical consideration, it is apparent that appellant's contention should not prevail. As suggested by respondent, the jury made no special finding upon the question as to whether or not the negligence of the driver of the express wagon ended or culminated when he turned toward or upon the track. As there is no special finding upon the question, it must be assumed, in support of the general verdict, that said driver, after turning upon the track, in the exercise of ordinary care could have turned off again before the collision and thus have avoided the injury.
Indeed, viewing the findings of the jury and the evidence in the record, as we must, in the light most favorable to respondent, the conclusion is irresistible that appellant's negligence was a proximate concurring, if not the sole proximate, cause of the injury. It thus appears that said negligence continued till the time of the injury, and had it not been for this negligence the accident would not have happened. In other words, it was an active, continuous contributing cause and, therefore, at least a necessary element of the proximate cause of the injury. We are at a loss to understand what element is lacking to render appellant liable. In reference to this point we agree with the views of Hon. John Hunt, the trial judge, who, in his opinion denying the motion to enter judgment for appellant, said: "Now, the injury suffered by plaintiff was not self-inflicted; it resulted either from the negligence of the defendant, the express company, or from the negligence of the defendant, the railroad company, or from the negligence of both. Under such conditions it cannot be that an innocent party injured in consequence of such negligence is remediless. In this case it is admitted that the car struck the wagon and that the wagon, in consequence of the impact, struck the plaintiff's wagon, and that the plaintiff was thereby injured. These acts of negligence may be *661
said to have been concurrent and simultaneous in point of time, although neither of those acts, standing alone, would have occasioned the result. If the wagon of the express company had not been driven upon the railroad track, it would not have been struck, and the plaintiff would not have been injured. If the motorman on the car had not been negligent, the collision would not have ensued, and the plaintiff would not have been injured. It was the combination of the negligent acts of the two defendants that occasioned the result, and therefore inquiry is immaterial into the precise degree or extent of the negligence of each of the parties defendant; or, the relation, in point of time, of such acts of negligence; or whether they were concurrent or successive, independent or joint, or whether one proximately contributed to the result more than the other. The rule of law upon this subject is well expressed in theSlater Case,
In Forsyth v. Los Angeles Ry. Co.,
But the principle is too well settled to require the citation of other authorities. We cannot undertake to review the cases cited by appellant, but most, if not all of them, involved the question whether the contributory negligence of the injured party or the subsequent negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the injury, and a not unreasonable tendency is manifested to hold liable the party who was chargeable with the later and grosser negligence. It is apparent that in many of the cases cited the terms "proximate cause" and "contributory negligence" are not used with precision and the grounds of some of the decisions are open to serious controversy, but, in general, they illustrate the "last chance doctrine" and hold as stated in Indianapolis St. Ry. Co. v.Schmidt,
Appellant complains of the following instruction given at the request of the United Railroads: "It is the duty of any person traveling upon, or partly upon, a street railroad track, *663
or in such close proximity to it as to be in danger of being struck by an approaching car, even though proceeding in the same direction of the car, to use ordinary care to ascertain whether a car is approaching, and to get out of the way of said car." The latter portion of the instruction is somewhat subject to criticism, but the phrase "ordinary care" is implied, and the jury could have understood the instruction only as meaning that it is the duty of a person, under the circumstances mentioned, "to use ordinary care to ascertain whether a car is approaching and to use ordinary care to get out of the way of said car." Even if we were to concede that this states the rule too favorably to the railroad company, if the action had been brought against it by Wells, Fargo Company, still it is not too exacting in favor of a third party who is injured by the failure of the driver to observe it, and it is a correct general statement of the law. In Baker v. Savage,
The jury could not have understood the language as importing an exclusive right in the railroad company to the use of the track. Any such implication was obviated by instruction No. 31 which we have already considered. It may be said also as to the latter part of the instruction complained of that it necessarily follows from the rule requiring the person "to use ordinary care to ascertain whether a car is approaching." The only purpose of exercising this care is that he may be in a position to "use ordinary care" to avoid a collision — in other words, "to get out of the way of the car." *664
The cases cited by appellant, Clark v. Bennett,
The court did not err in omitting from one of the instructions requested by appellant the following clause: "and the driver of Wells-Fargo's wagon had a right to assume that this would be done (that is, that the motorman would give warning and slow down) at the time of the accident complained of if a car should approach him from behind. If there were obstructions on the right hand or south side of the street at the time mentioned, or if that portion of the street was full of chuck-holes, the driver had the right to take the middle or northerly side of the street in order to have a clear way." It cannot be the law, because it is not reasonable, that one's negligence whereby another is injured is excusable because the former assumed that a third party would do his duty. One without fault himself can recover for injury caused by the negligence of another, whether or not the latter mistakenly assumed that a third party would exercise proper care. Indeed, in the Scott case, cited by appellant, it is said: "He cannot rely wholly on the care of others, nor, on that account, neglect to use the precautions which the particular situation demands of him. . . . The rule should be that the traveler has the right to assume, until his senses, exercised with reasonable diligence, inform him to the contrary, that the persons operating street-cars will use ordinary care, give the usual signals, and keep the usual look-out ahead." As to the latter portion of the instruction it is sufficient to say that it was properly rejected because it did not fit the evidence. Considering the instructions as a whole, we are satisfied that appellant has no just cause to complain. They certainly stated the law as favorably to the express company as it had a right to demand, and, altogether, they gave to the jury a fair and *665
just notion of the law upon the points discussed. (Stephenson v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Finally, there is another consideration which seems a complete answer to nearly if not to all of appellant's contentions. The bill of exceptions of the express company purports only to give "all the evidence introduced at the trial tending in any way to support or justify the verdict of the jury in the particulars hereinafter specified by defendant Wells, Fargo Company as the particulars in which said verdict was not justified by the evidence." When we turn to those particulars, we find they all relate to the capacity of plaintiff to earn money, his employment, the extent of his injury and the amount to which he has been damaged, while all the alleged errors which are argued in the brief relate to the subject of negligence. What is the result? Simply, that we must assume that the evidence was such that the errors, if any, were without prejudice, for it surely cannot be said that any of them would be prejudicial under any conceivable state of facts within the issues. Furthermore, if necessary to support the judgment, we should assume that the case was tried upon the theory that such evidence was within the issues. At most, then, we would have a case of abstract error, and what was said inHamlin v. Pacific Electric Ry. Co.,
We have thus devoted much time and space to the various contentions of the parties. We deemed it proper to do so as they are important, and they have been argued exhaustively and with apparent sincerity by learned counsel, and in view of the contingency of a new trial. *666
We have no doubt that the judgment and order should be reversed as to the United Railroads and affirmed as to Wells, Fargo Company, and it is so ordered.
Hart, J., and Chipman, P. J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on Angust 23, 1911, and 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 September 22, 1911.