Bickford v. Pacific Electric Railway Co.

8 P.2d 186, 120 Cal. App. 542, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
DocketDocket No. 7683.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 186 (Bickford v. Pacific Electric 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
Bickford v. Pacific Electric Railway Co., 8 P.2d 186, 120 Cal. App. 542, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 17 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an action brought by plaintiffs to recover damages resulting from an accident wherein their minor son was killed by an interurban train of the defendant railway company.

The case was tried before a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiffs, and in accord with said verdict judgment was duly entered. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied. The appeal of defendant from said judgment *546 is now before us. A discussion of the arguments presented by both sides necessarily involves analysis of the facts and further it will require that not only the facts sufficient to sustain the verdict be considered, but likewise it is essential that we consider the facts in entirety and such necessity will hereinafter appear.

The accident happened on July 4, 1925. The day ivas dry and clear, there being no storm or fog. The scene of the occurrence was in the city limits of Long Beach in Los Angeles County. The exact locality was at or near the intersection of Alamitos Avenue and the Pacific Electric right of way. The maps and diagrams used in the court below and constituting a portion of the present record, give the accurate courses of the streets and of the right of way. Alamitos Avenue runs northeasterly and southwesterly, and the right of way in question runs northwesterly and southeasterly. A street designated as Center parallels the right of way up to Alamitos, said Center Street being immediately east of the right of way. Hereafter, to avoid confusion, we will omit the compass variations and consider that Alamitos runs east and west, and the right of way north and south. The surrounding area may be described as level and without grade and the neighborhood of comparatively sparse improvements. Standing at the intersection of Alamitos and the right of way looking north, the right of way and objects thereon may be seen for a distance of some three thousand feet; and from the opposite direction, standing at a point on the right of way some three thousand feet northerly of the intersection, there is a clear and unobstructed view through to Alamitos Avenue. In the area of the intersection, the tracks of the railway are laid flush with the pavement, presenting no obstacle or obstruction to traffic. Without the intersection, the tracks are laid on top of the ground, rising to a height of three or four inches.

The record discloses without conflict that at the time in question, there was existing a barrier or obstruction that prevented travel proceeding easterly on Alamitos Avenue beyond the easterly boundary of the right of way. By reason of this, persons desiring to cross the avenue and turn south into Center Street would cross the tracks and then turn southerly down the right of way over the raised rails and short cut over the hazards into Center.

*547 On the day of the accident the two minor sons of plaintiffs, in an open car, came to the intersection. The boys were named Harry Bobert Bickford, aged about fourteen years, and Donald Bickford, aged about twelve years, the ages given being as of the date of the accident. The boy killed in the accident was the older of the two, and both boys hereafter will be referred to by the names Harry and Donald.

With this view of the physical situation, we may approach the accident. There appear from the record several conflicting stories as to the manner of the occurrence, and the circumstances surrounding. It is not our purpose to attempt to again determine the conflict of fact, but merely to outline the varying statements out of which the theories of the respective parties arise.

One version of the accident places the boys on the track of the defendant with the car stalled. Harry is seated in the car and Donald is out of the car and in front thereof attempting to crank the engine. There is no train in sight from any direction. The car is stalled on the track for approximately two minutes before the train comes along. Then, without warning of any kind, by bell, whistle or otherwise, the train coming at a speed of from fifty to sixty miles an hour, bears down upon the automobile. Donald has barely time to jump out of the way as the collision occurs. Harry, in the automobile, is killed. This version is given by witnesses not interested and observing the occurrence from varying viewpoints. I

Another version is given by the surviving boy Donald. He states that the machine was struck at a point on the right of way some fifteen feet south of the intersection and in the area where the tracks are raised above the ground. From his testimony it would appear that much difficulty was encountered by the boys in the endeavor to cross over the raised tracks; so much in fact that the crossing could not be made and, after stalling the machine at least once, they turned back. After making the turn, the automobile again stalled on the track where struck. It is Donald’s testimony that he was out of the machine attempting to crank the engine when the train bore down on them. He testifies that he had been thus engaged for about two minutes and that when he got out of the machine there was no train in sight.

*548 The testimony adduced by defendant, of course, is in direct conflict with that of plaintiffs. Defendant’s version, supported by the testimony not only of its employees but also by that of disinterested passengers may now be considered, and the events detailed in accord therewith. The train was traveling around thirty miles per hour. As it approached the intersection, the whistle was blown almost constantly until the crossing was reached. The motorman first saw the automobile straddling one of the other tracks, the train then being some two hundred feet from the point of collision. The automobile was then headed in the same direction as the train, that is, in a general southerly direction. The automobile was then about fourteen feet from the track on which the train was being operated. The automobile was then stopped. There was a clearance of about fourteen feet between the train and the automobile. The machine then started in a southeasterly direction and moved along about fifty feet. Then all of a sudden the automobile turned and came toward the train. At that time the train was about seventy-five feet away. The automobile was not stalled at any time on the tracks prior to the time the emergency brakes were applied to the train and the train and the automobile arrived simultaneously at the point of impact. The accident occurred about fifty feet southerly of the street intersection.

In concluding the review of the varying stories it may be well to note that at the coroner’s inquest the witness Donald Bickford testified that he jumped to safety from the moving automobile; that when he jumped the automobile was crossing the tracks and he jumped when he saw the train coming and after he heard the whistle.

The verdict of the jury does not reflect its solution of the conflict in the facts. The verdict, being general, simply finds that defendant was liable. It then becomes highly important to consider the instructions given to guide the jury in its deliberations and this we will now proceed to do. We may, however, preface our inquiry with some general observations.

A litigant requesting it is entitled to proper instructions presenting his theory of the case based upon the pleadings and proof.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 186, 120 Cal. App. 542, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bickford-v-pacific-electric-railway-co-calctapp-1932.