Bellman v. San Francisco High School District

81 P.2d 894, 11 Cal. 2d 576, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1938
DocketS. F. 15850
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 894 (Bellman v. San Francisco High School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bellman v. San Francisco High School District, 81 P.2d 894, 11 Cal. 2d 576, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 332 (Cal. 1938).

Opinions

THE COURT.

Because of the importance of the question a rehearing was granted in this ease. Upon further consideration of the principles involved we are satisfied with the conclusions reached upon the previous hearing and we hereby adopt the opinion prepared at that time by Mr. Justice Edmonds as our opinion upon rehearing. It follows:

“While a student in the Polytechnic High School at San Francisco, Belva Bellman, a seventeen-year-old girl, sustained personal injuries while endeavoring to do, an exercise taught in the tumbling class which was conducted by the school as one of the courses in physical education. Through a guardian -ad litem she brought suit against the San Francisco High School District and by the verdict of a jury was awarded damages in the sum of $15,000. A judgment was thereafter entered in her favor, and the school district has appealed from the judgment and from the order by which it was denied a new trial.
‘ ‘ The respondent was a student in the high sophomore class of the school for the spring term of 1934 and enrolled in a ‘Beginners’ Tumbling Class’. There were eighteen separate exercises or stunts prescribed for this class. It was necessary to do successfully at least ten of the eighteen in order to obtain a passing grade and the more stunts which were satisfactorily performed, the higher the grade which was given. One of these exercises is known as the ‘roll over two’. To do it the performer takes a short run and dives over two persons who are on the floor on their hands and knees, alights on outstretched arms, and with the head curled under in order to complete a forward roll, comes to a standing position. While trying to accomplish this feat the respondent struck her head. The appellant contends that there is no evidence of any negligence of the school .district, or of its officers or employees, which resulted in the injuries complained of and that they were caused by the contributory negligence of the student. It is also claimed that the damages awarded are excessive and that errors were committed by the trial court entitling the school district to a reversal of the judgment.

“Contrary to the rule of the common law, the legislature of this state has declared that school boards shall be ‘liable as such in the name of the district for any judgment [581]*581against the district on account of injury to any pupil arising because of the negligence of the district or its officers or employees’. (Sec. 2.801, School Code; Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 7519.) The School Code also requires high school boards to prescribe suitable courses in physical education (sec. 3.731) and makes it the duty of such boards ‘to enforce the courses of physical education prescribed by the proper authority, and to require that such physical education be given in the schools under their jurisdiction or control’. (Sec. 3.733.) All high school students except those in cadet companies or excused on account of physical disability must ‘attend upon such courses of physical education for at least two hours each week that school is in session’. (Sec. 3.735.)

“Prior to the term in which she was injured, the respondent had been a student in the same school and was enrolled in the gymnasium classes. According to her testimony, in January, 1934, when the new semester commenced, she asked to continue in the gymnasium class but was told by the teacher in charge of registration that the gymnasium classes were full and that she would have to take physical education in the tumbling class. The school officials deny that this occurred. In any event, the respondent entered the tumbling class and attended regularly from January until May, when the accident occurred. In that time she learned to do a number of the exercises, including the ‘roll over two’. The accident happened during a regular class period while the respondent was attempting to do the exercise with the teacher of phj^sical education watching her. This teacher testified that as the respondent ‘took off and jumped over the girls, her hands were not extended as they should be for the proper landing, but were about half bent, and consequently when her hands hit the floor her head was there also instead of the hands taking the weight so that the head could tuck under’.

“The implied finding of the jury that the employees of the school district were negligent is conclusive if there is substantial evidence which, when read with the inferences most favorable to the respondent, support the verdict. The intendments are in favor of the judgment (Hassell v. Bunge, 167 Cal. 365 [139 Pac. 800]; Hind v. Oriental Products Co., 195 Cal. 655 [235 Pac. 438]) and while the evidence shows that the respondent received injury because she did not do the exercise correctly, this does not necessarily convict her of contributory negligence nor absolve the school [582]*582district from liability. The question is whether the school officials used the same care as persons of ordinary prudence, charged with the duty of carrying on the public school system, would use under the same circumstances. The legislature has made school districts responsible for the injury of any pupil resulting from the failure of their officers or employees to use ordinary care. What is ordinary care depends upon the circumstances of each particular case and is to be determined as a fact with reference to the situation and knowledge of the parties.

“In deciding whether the employees of the appellant used ordinary care it was proper for the jury to consider not only whether the exercise was inherently dangerous but also whether they should have allowed or required the respondent to take instruction in tumbling. It is a matter of common knowledge that some students show much more aptitude for athletics than do others. Some enjoy physical exercise; others find games or stunts of any kind very difficult. Frequently students of the same age have very different capacities for physical training. Also, some forms of exercise are considered entirely proper for boys while too strenuous or otherwise undesirable for girls. In the exercise of ordinary care it was the duty of the teachers employed by the school district to take all of these factors with others into consideration in determining the kind of instruction to be given the respondent.

“In her testimony the teacher of the tumbling class said that in order to do the ‘roll over two’ the student should make an approach to the persons on the floor by a run in good rhythm, neither too fast nor too slow, and take off from the two feet, not from one, making a good spring over the backs of the other students to clear them from 12 to 18 inches. The important thing, she said, is the landing. Describing this she said the performer must land on the hands, with the hands taking the weight of the body almost straight but under control with the head tucked in. The exercise is completed, according to her, by dropping on the shoulders and coming to a standing position with the feet together.

“Of the 18 exercises taught in the tumbling class the ‘roll over two’ is the only one where the body is entirely off the floor for a portion of the time it is being performed. The evidence presented to the jury shows that it requires complete coordination, and the teacher admitted that if for any reason the rhythm required for that type of work is broken, [583]

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Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 894, 11 Cal. 2d 576, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellman-v-san-francisco-high-school-district-cal-1938.