Baker v. Market Street Railway Co.

11 P.2d 912, 123 Cal. App. 688, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 964
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8030.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 912 (Baker v. Market Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Market Street Railway Co., 11 P.2d 912, 123 Cal. App. 688, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 964 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

ROBINSON, J., pro tem.

This appeal is taken by the defendant railway corporation from judgment in favor of plaintiffs, Charles IT. Baker and Ethel Baker, his wife. The action is for damages for personal injuries sustained by the wife and special damages suffered by the husband in a street-car accident, the complaint alleging negligence on the part of .the railway corporation in suddenly starting the street-car while Ethel Baker, a debarking passenger, was about to alight at her destination.

The charge of negligence is special, the complaint alleging that on April 24, 1929, while plaintiff Ethel Baker was in the act of alighting from a Haight Street car which had stopped on Haight Street at Buchanan Street, San Francisco, the “defendants and each of them, without warning to plaintiff, suddenly and so negligently started said streetcar as to cause plaintiff, Ethel Baker, to be and she was precipitated from the platform of said street car into the intersection of said streets”, and injured in the' “right side of the body in the region immediately above the right hip bone”, and elsewhere. The action was commenced on March 14, 1930.

The railway company’s answer admits its corporate existence and also that it operated electric street-cars on Haight Street, San Francisco. Separate special defenses charging contributory negligence generally are set up against the plaintiffs severally, and the case was tried upon the theory of negligence being charged by the plaintiffs and contributory negligence charged by the defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Ethel Baker in the sum of $6,000, and a separate verdict in favor of her husband, Charles H. Baker, in the sum of $1500.

*691 The points relied upon by the appellant upon this appeal are: First, that the evidence does not support the verdict; second, that the verdicts are grossly excessive; third, that plaintiffs’ counsel was guilty of prejudicial conduct in his argument to the jury, and, fourth, that the court erred in refusing two certain instructions offered by the defendant railway company and also in giving two certain instructions at the request of the plaintiffs.

The points relied upon will be disposed of in the foregoing sequence.

A careful review of the evidence reveals ample support of both verdicts. The plaintiff Ethel Baker testified that she boarded the Haight Street car at Eighth and Market Streets, San Francisco, paid her fare, walked to about the middle of the car and took a standing position, the car being fairly crowded. "When the street-car came within about a quarter of a- block of arriving at her destination, the corner of Haight and Buchanan Streets, she pressed a button to signal for a stop and went to the rear exit. The car stopped with the rear end at about the middle of the intersection. She testified that she took hold of the stanchion at the rear exit with her right hand and held a package in her left arm; that according to her best recollection, someone preceded her in alighting; that as she started to lift her left foot to step down from the- platform to the step “the car started up with a jerk”, and that she was “shot through the” exit, and “out on the street”, falling on her left hip, shoulders and head. Her testimony was corroborated by plaintiffs’ witness Frank I. Meyers. His testimony was that the ear came to a full stop and that after alighting therefrom he walked directly to the northwesterly corner and waited for the car to start so as to permit him to cross Haight Street; that he was facing Mrs. Baker, and when he first saw her, “She was leaning over, attempting to get down to the next step, and the car give a sudden jerk and bumped her off in the street, and started forward”; that when he first saw her the car was at a dead stop; that it started as she was attempting to alight.

Testimony was adduced by the defendant company in contradiction of the foregoing evidence; but, at most, the defendant's evidence produces only a substantial conflict *692 upon a question of fact, which, cannot be resolved by this court.

“Whether this method of starting a car after it had been stopped for the purpose of enabling passengers to alight and while passengers were in the act of alighting was or was not negligence on the part of the defendant was clearly a question for the jury.” (Murray v. United Railroads, 49 Cal. App. 462 [193 Pac. 596].)

The appellant’s contention that the verdicts were grossly excessive is not supported by the evidence. Before this court can exercise its power of revision over a jury’s verdict upon the question of reasonable compensation for unliquidated items of damage, there must appear from the evidence a disproportion that shocks the sense of justice.

The evidence discloses that before the accident Mrs. Baker, forty-nine years of age, was in good health, doing her own housework, and able to walk long distances without fatigue; that in falling heavily upon the pavement at the time of the accident, her left shoulder and left hip were cut and bruised; that she sustained other objective injuries; that she suffered pain in her side and severe headaches then and for long thereafter; that from her injuries she had become, at the time of trial, subject to pain in the left hip while walking. Her physician, Dr. Francis Redewill, rendered to Mrs. Baker medical services for the care of her injuries, which appellant’s trial counsel stipulated were of the reasonable value of $358. This physician, an expert urologist, testified that he found Mrs. Baker to be suffering from a fallen kidney, resulting in a seventy-five per cent loss of its function; that in his own twenty-five years of professional experience, he had known that where kidneys were removed, or damaged, to such an extent that they are the same as removed, one can expect the patient to live for only ten years. He testified that Mrs. Baker needed an operation for kidney suspension, and that her falling from a street-car to the pavement upon her left side and shoulder would be a probable producing cause of the injuries regarding which she testified. He explained at length how her falling upon the left side would injure the right kidney, and testified that the cases of falling kidney which he had treated numbered two or three thousand. It will serve no useful purpose to set forth here the lengthy testimony of the attending physician, *693 Dr. Bedewill; suffice it to say that a review of the evidence bearing upon this point leaves this court’s sense of justice unshocked by the jury’s valuation of Mrs. Balter’s injuries.

“Unless we are able to say that the award of damages made by the jury and sustained by the trial court was so grossly disproportionate to any compensation reasonably warranted by the facts as presented to us on appeal as to shock the sense of justice and raise at once a presumption that it was the result of passion, prejudice, or corruption, rather than an honest and sober judgment, this court may not exercise the power of revision.” (Kelley v. Hoge Transp. System, 197 Cal. 598 [242 Pac. 76, 81].)

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 912, 123 Cal. App. 688, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-market-street-railway-co-calctapp-1932.