300 P. 883 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
This is an action for damages to personal property and for personal injuries sustained in a collision between two automobiles at an intersection of two streets in Ocean Beach, San Diego County, on May 10, 1928. This case was tried before a jury, verdict was given in favor of the plaintiffs, judgment rendered thereon in the sum of $10,000 and from this judgment defendants appeal.
[1] The sole question presented on this appeal is whether or not the evidence showed the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. The trial court denied defendants' motion for nonsuit, motion for directed verdict, motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict and motion for new trial. The question whether or not a plaintiff has *703
been guilty of contributory negligence is usually one of fact for the jury. In Wynne v. Wright,
With these rules in mind we will summarize the evidence favorable to the plaintiff to which we must look to support the judgment, if it is to be supported. That the evidence, even of the plaintiff herself, as to some of the facts, was conflicting, must be admitted. Plaintiff Anna A. Wise on the day of the accident was driving her automobile in a northerly direction on Cable Street in the afternoon of a clear day at a lawful rate of speed, less than 15 miles per hour, on her right-hand side of a paved street in a residential district in Ocean Beach. As she approached or was entering the intersection of Narragansett and Cable Streets she testified she made an observation of all four corners of said intersection and did not see any other cars approaching; that her vision of the approaching traffic on all four corners was not to her knowledge obstructed, but that to her left and on the south side of Narragansett Street as she approached Narragansett Street, 103 feet from the property line at the southwest corner of Cable and Narragansett Streets there was a fence, a house and a lot of bushes, which obstructed the view of approaching traffic to some extent. She further testified that she looked first to the right, then to the left, but did not see the approaching car until she was in the intersection. She again looked to her left when in the intersection and saw defendants' car just entering the intersection in the middle of the street to her left. At that time plaintiffs' car *704 was entirely within the intersection, the front wheels thereof at about the center line of Narragansett Street. Plaintiff observed the defendants' car and noticed the face of the driver turned toward the rear of her car as though she was talking to her boy who was seated to her right in the rear seat of defendants' car. The evidence as to the speed of the defendants' car was conflicting, ranging from 30 to 50 miles per hour, as it proceeded in an easterly direction on Narragansett Street. Defendants' car collided with the rear portion of plaintiffs' car just immediately north of the center line of Narragansett Street in the intersection and immediately east of the center line of Cable Street. Plaintiff testified as follows: Q. Mrs. Wise, going westward from the property line at the southwest of Cable and Narragansett Street, how far is it before you come to the next house? A. To the fence of the next house is 103 feet. Q. Is the house next to the fence? A. Well, not far away from the fence. I did not measure that. It is not far from the fence, but there is a lot of bushes which would obstruct the view of a machine coming — high rose bushes trellised up and things like that . . . Q. As you leave the property line at the southwest corner of this intersection how far is it going south to the first house? A. 53 feet. . . . Q. As you approached the intersection . . . where were you looking? . . . A. Why, I say, I did as I always do on entering an intersection. I always look around all four corners and I did not stop it. . . . Q. Was there any machine in sight at that time? A. No, sir. . . . Q. When you first saw Mrs. Stott's car, your car was in a position headed north on Cable Street, and the head end of it was about directly east from the button, or center of the intersection? . . . A. Yes sir. . . . Her front wheels were over this line when I first saw her car . . . Q. Now if that was the first time that you looked to the left — A. No, no. Q. And saw Mrs. Stott's car — A. I have already told you that was the second time. Q. Well, that is the first time you saw Mrs. Stott's car though? A. Yes, that is the first time, but that is the second time that I looked to the left. . . . Q. How far were you, in your opinion, south of Narragansett Street when you first looked to see if any car was approaching Cable Street on Narragansett Street? . . . A. Well, as I say, I may have been one car length or two *705 car lengths or three car lengths, or four car lengths, I cannot exactly tell."
Upon the facts which we have stated we are asked to hold that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and cannot recover. The defendant invokes the doctrine that for one to look and fail to see that which is in sight is as neglectful as not to look at all. For the purpose of this decision therefore we will assume that when she was entering the intersection and looked, the plaintiff saw, or should have seen, the defendants' car approaching from the west. Would this fact be sufficient to charge the plaintiffs with contributory negligence as a matter of law? There is no dispute as to the right of the plaintiff herein to the right of way, she having entered the intersection first. (Lipp v. Moon,
Judgment affirmed.
Barnard, P.J., and Marks, J., concurred.