Bennington v. National Packing Co.

9 P.2d 857, 122 Cal. App. 313, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1099
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1932
DocketDocket No. 704.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 857 (Bennington v. National Packing 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
Bennington v. National Packing Co., 9 P.2d 857, 122 Cal. App. 313, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1099 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LAMBERT, J., pro tem.

In this case the plaintiff and respondent, T. A. Bennington, brought an action against defendant and appellant, National Packing Company, a co-partnership consisting of L. A. Chudacoff and Max Gold-ring, for injuries sustained in a collision with an automobile belonging to the defendants, and driven at the time by L. A. Chudacoff. The ease was tried by the court sitting with a jury, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $15,000. The defendants made a motion for a new trial on all the statutory grounds; the motion was denied. Appellant appealed from the judgment and order denying the new trial. The sole point made on this appeal, and for which we are asked to reverse the judgment is that the trial court abused its discretion in not granting a new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence.

The only witnesses as to how the accident happened were the plaintiff and the defendant Chudacoff, and each claimed it was the other’s fault. The accident took place at the intersection of Sixth and St. Louis Streets, in the city of Los Angeles. Sixth Street runs east and west and St. Louis Street runs north and south. The plaintiff was driving a Ford coupe west on Sixth Street and defendant was driving a Ford sedan on St. Louis Street. Sixth Street slopes downward toward the intersection and St. Louis slopes upward toward the intersection, so that just prior to the accident plaintiff was going downhill and defendant Chudacoff uphill. Sixth Street, east of St. Louis, is -forty feet from curb to curb, and west of St. Louis Street is twenty feet from curb to curb. St. Louis Street, both north and south of Sixth Street, is forty feet from curb to curb. The plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect that when he was thirty-five or forty feet east of the intersection he first saw the defendant Chudacoff 325 feet north of the intersection, and that he was traveling forty-five miles an hour, and that he slowed down very little as he approached the *315 intersection. That, plaintiff, when he first observed the defendant, was traveling five to ten miles per hour; that he was going five miles per hour when he entered the intersection and was going about seven miles per hour at the center of the intersection. He kept his eye on defendant until he reached the center of the intersection, at which time the defendant was still forty or sixty feet north of the northerly curb line of Sixth Street. Before the ear reached the westerly curb line of St. Louis Street it was struck by defendant’s ear.

The defendant’s testimony was, when his sedan was about ten feet from the intersection the plaintiff’s coupe was about fifty feet from the intersection. That his car was going fifteen to twenty miles per hour, slowed down as he approached the intersection, and had almost stopped at the time of the accident; that his sedan was first in the intersection ; that plaintiff’s coupe was coming at a speed of forty miles per hour, swaying from side to side as though the driver had lost control of it, and did not slow down at all, and, still going at this high rate of speed, struck his sedan.

O'n the motion for new trial the defendants presented the affidavit of James Hoag, who claimed to be an eye-witness of the accident, and whose affidavit corroborated, in all particulars, the testimony of the defendant Chudaeoff. There was also presented the affidavits of Mrs. Kitty Manheimer, Leonard A. Chudaeoff and Bose Chudaeoff, his wife. These affidavits set forth the facts and circumstances showing the defendant’s reasons for not producing the witness Hoag at the trial. The affidavit of Kitty Manheimer set forth in substance that, she conducted a rooming-house at 812 West Tenth Street, in the city of Los Angeles; that she was personally acquainted with James Hoag and that he lived at her rooming-house in June, 1926, and left her place September 1, 1926; that while Hoag lived at her house, somebody unknown to her called her on the telephone a number of times and asked for James Hoag, and that on each occasion he was not at home; that thereafter a man called at her house looking for a man who had witnessed an automobile accident at Sixth and St. Louis Streets, but that she could not recall his name; that on September 28, 1927, a woman, stating she was Bose Chudaeoff, came to her rooming-house and talked to her at length; that in the *316 course of the conversation affiant mentioned the name of Jimmie Hoag, and that Rose Chudacoff immediately said, “Jimmie Hoag, that was the name of the witness”; that affiant then told Rose Chudacoff where the witness Hoag could be located; and that she recognized Leonard E. Chudacoff as the man who had previously called at her home making inquiry about Jimmie Hoag.

Leonard E. Chudacoff in his affidavit deposes, among other things, that he was in the hospital about eleven weeks following the accident; that while in the hospital he learned that one of the employees of the hospital was an eye-witness to said accident, but he did not learn his name before he left the hospital; that when he left he requested the manager of the hospital to ascertain the name of the witness, if possible, and advise him at his office; that about two months after he left the hospital somebody telephoned the name of the eye-witness was Jimmie Hoag and that his address was 812 West Tenth Street, Los Angeles, and also gave the telephone number at said address; that the name and address were taken by his secretary and written on a piece of paper and given to him; and that he took it home and placed it in a dresser drawer, and that it afterwards became lost. Here an extract from the affidavit is as follows:

“ . . . affiant was never able thereafter to find said paper and was not able to remember the name of said witness; that before losing the name and address and telephone number of said Jimmie Hoag affiant called said telephone number several times but was unable to get in touch with Jimmie Hoag, it being stated on each instance that he was away; that affiant stated to the party who answered the telephone at the said address that he wanted to talk to said Jimmie Hoag about the accident which had occurred at Sixth and St. Louis streets; that a short time after receiving said name and address affiant drove past the address given on said paper and at said time affiant’s said wife, Rose Chudacoff, was with him, and affiant pointed out the said house, stating that it was the house where the man who had witnessed his accident lived; that thereafter affiant lost said paper, containing the name and address of said witness; that the time when affiant drove past said house was a very short time after receiving said name and address; *317

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 857, 122 Cal. App. 313, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennington-v-national-packing-co-calctapp-1932.