Becker v. City & County of San Francisco

264 P.2d 133, 121 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1415
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1953
DocketCiv. 15237
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 P.2d 133 (Becker v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Becker v. City & County of San Francisco, 264 P.2d 133, 121 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1415 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

*724 GOODELL, J.

Plaintiff sued for serious injuries sustained when he was hit by a municipal railway bus at the northeasterly corner of Mission and 23d Streets in San Francisco. The jury returned a verdict for the defense and plaintiff appealed after a new trial had been denied.

Twenty-third Street runs approximately easterly and westerly and Mission Street at that point runs approximately northerly and southerly. On April 21, 1950, about 11 a. m. plaintiff while standing oh the easterly curb of Mission Street at a regular bus-stop leaned forward and his head came into contact with the side of a moving bus, which was headed northerly.

Plaintiff, who was about 82, was unable to testify because of his serious brain injuries. The first blow on his head spun him around several times and he struck the sidewalk on the back of his head, sustaining a fracture of the skull.

There were four witnesses to the accident, namely Kelsey, who was waiting on the curb for the bus; Platt, a passenger sitting on the right-hand side of the bus looking out the window; Lobley, a passenger standing on the right-hand side of the bus, also looking out, and Carlson, the operator, in the driver’s seat.

Kelsey, a witness for the plaintiff, saw practically all that happened as he leaned against a pole looking toward the south. He saw the bus come to a stop at the southeasterly corner of Mission and 23d and then cross 23d and draw in to the bus-stop on the northeast corner. He saw the impact, and as plaintiff was spun around attempted to save him from falling.

Kelsey testified that as plaintiff stood on the sidewalk about 10 feet south of the pole his “toes were just about even with the outside edge of the curb”; that from an erect position “he leaned, nodded his head slightly forward as if to spit onto the gutter”; he “bent forward from the waist up”; he moved his head “maybe six inches or so.” He testified that when the bus came into the loading zone at a slight angle its front end was 14 or 15 inches out from the curb; that as the bus was passing plaintiff, plaintiff “leaned way out from the hips” and that the portion of the bus which came in contact with him was “the door well, in the front section of the bus”; he “leaned out just as the bus hit him”; that the front of the bus was just even with him as he leaned forward, and “he banged his head then into the side of the bus” as it was passing; the plain *725 tiff’s head, he testified, was the only part of his body that came in contact with the bus. He testified that when he first saw him, plaintiff was facing west, then looked “back and forth up and down the street” and as the bus was coming in and he leaned forward he was looking straight ahead, not in the direction from which the bus was coming, or toward the bus. The witness gave an approximation “of depreciation in elevation . . . between the height of the plaintiff and the point where he leaned over and his head was hit” as “between 8 and 10, maybe 12 inches.” He testified that the blow ‘ ‘ caught him more or less on the forehead ’ ’; that his head “bounced off the bus” and that he had warned “Look out!” or something like that because plaintiff was placing himself in a position where he was liable to be hit by the bus. He testified that he heard no horn blow.

Platt, a defense witness, was a bus operator for the municipal railway but off duty and riding in the bus as a passenger. He testified that he saw through the window “a man standing near the loading zone, and he bent over just as the bus was approaching . . . when he bent over . . . I heard a passenger scream.” He estimated that plaintiff was standing 12 or 18 inches from the curb, and right in the loading zone. He said he could see nothing to cause him to beñd over, and said he did not know “whether he bent over after the front of the bus passed him or if he bent over in front of the bus”; he could not see. When he bent over he was facing straight across Mission Street and that at no time that he saw him was he looking in the direction from which the bus was coming. “Q. Can you tell us whether or not any part of the bus Avent over onto the sidewalk in that loading zone area? A. Well, I don’t think so. . . . The bus Avas parallel.”

Lobley, a defense witness, testified that from where he stood in the bus right behind the front door, as the bus was coming into the loading zone he “saw a man standing on the edge of the curb and his feet were right ... on the curb line . . . and this man bent over and as he did so, as he passed the front door he hit the bus, turned around, the bus Avhirled him around, he landed on the sidewalk on the back of his head.” When plaintiff bent over, Lobley testified, the front of the bus was approximately 6 or 8 inches from the curb and approximately 24 inches in back of the pole; the front of the bus had passed the plaintiff before he bent over; plaintiff’s head struck the bus back of the front door. “As *726 the bus swung in he leaned over. In fact, he leaned over before the bus got to him, and in doing so he struck his head in that section of the bus right there that I have marked. . . . Q. Was there any reason that you could see for him to bend over, to cause him to bend? A. No, sir, it just amazed me at the moment. It happened so fast. Q. Did any part of the bus at any time, so far as you could observe, go over upon the sidewalk area? A. No, sir, definitely not.” On cross-examination he testified that when he said 6 inches he meant “the distance between the curb and the wheels or the body of the bus.” He said he realized that the wheels are in further underneath the body. He testified that the impact was so strong it could be felt throughout the bus. He testified that plaintiff “hit that section [of the bus] just back of the front, just where the hinges are. . . . You know, where the door swings open” . . . “Q. Something that protrudes out from the side of the bus? A. Yes, sir, on the corner.”

Carlson, the bus operator, a witness for the defense, testified that as he drove into the bus-stop he saw plaintiff on the sidewalk, but knew nothing of the impact until a passenger screamed.

With respect to the speed of the bus as it approached the bus-stop, Kelsey testified that as it crossed 23d it was “around 10 miles an hour”; Platt testified that as it came into the loading zone it was about 5 miles per hour. Lobley put it at “no more than maybe 5, 6, 7 miles an hour; something like that” but added that that would be hard for him to determine.

With respect to the proximity of the bus to the curb Kelsey testified that at the time of impact it “was still coming on an angle, and I imagine his rear wheels were about 4 feet out of the curb and the front was just about even with the curb.” On cross-examination he testified that at the time of impact the front end of the bus “was just out a few inches, or just about even with the curb. ... It was in fairly close.” Platt testified: “Q. Can you tell us whether or not any part of the bus went over onto the sidewalk in that loading zone area? A. Well, I dont think so. . . . The bus was paralled to the curb, so I am sure no part of the bus went over the curb.” On cross-examination he testified “Q. And was the bus coming in at an angle at that time? [when plaintiff bent over]. A. Well, I dont hardly think it was at an angle . . .

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Related

Gibson v. Southern Pacific Co.
290 P.2d 347 (California Court of Appeal, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
264 P.2d 133, 121 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-calctapp-1953.