Bond v. United Railroads of San Francisco

140 P. 982, 24 Cal. App. 157, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 112
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1165.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 P. 982 (Bond v. United Railroads 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
Bond v. United Railroads of San Francisco, 140 P. 982, 24 Cal. App. 157, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 112 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment in favor of plaintiff for four thousand five hundred dollars, entered in accordance with the direction of the supreme court, and it is a companion case to No. 1180, * involving an appeal from the order of the lower court striking from the record defendant’s motion for a new trial, the opinion in which is filed herewith.

It was the theory of plaintiff that her son, Gustave Fritz, was a passenger riding on the running board opposite the rear open section of an electric car proceeding southerly on a westerly Fillmore Street track, in San Francisco, on the evening of December 17, 1905, when the eastbound McAllister Street cable car collided with it at the crossing of said streets, and that by reason of said collision the said Fritz received injuries from which he died on the twenty-eighth day of December, 1905. This appears suitably in the complaint with the allegation of negligent operation of said cars by defendant.

1. The preliminary motion of respondent to dismiss the appeal, based upon reasons sufficiently appearing in said opinion in No. 1180, must be denied, on the authority of Sala v. City of Pasadena, 162 Cal. 714, [124 Pac. 539].

2. The futility of appellant’s contention as to the insufficiency of the proof that the deceased was a passenger on said car at the time of the accident is fully disclosed by the quotations made.by appellant from the testimony.

Charles F. O’Callaghan, an attorney at law, who was riding on the forward end of the east-bound McAllister Street car, testified as follows: “The Fillmore Street car was crowded, and there were passengers standing upon the running boards on the rear westerly portion of the open section. . . . My best recollection is that upon the Fillmore Street car at about the point where our car struck it, there were three or four persons standing on the lower running board and about the same number upon the upper running board. ... I observed passen *160 sengers who were injured on the Fillmore Street car right after the collision. After the cars collided there were a number of people spread around over the ground. . . . With reference to the rear portion of the Fillmore Street car, the wounded passengers to whom I have referred were on the ground alongside of the car—along toward the southwest corner of Fillmore and McAllister streets, in that direction. . . . My recollection is that a number of the passengers that were standing on the westerly side of the rear section of that southerly bound Fillmore Street car fell to the street. They fell as the Fillmore Street car swerved away. ... As these passengers were falling I observed the streets between the two cars and to which these passengers fell. I saw no human being lying on that street before passengers fell. Some of the passengers that fell got up, but three continued to lie on the street. There was a boy pretty close to the rear—that is, in about the direction that the Fillmore Street ear swerved from, and over there along south of him were two other persons. These passengers fell from the car and subsequently lay upon the street. . . . These three people were not lying upon the street before I saw these passengers falling from the car. I saw a number of people fall from the car, and some of them got up, and these three did not get up.”

The foregoing was supplemented by the testimony of F. E. Winters, a policeman, who, just prior to the accident, was standing at the southeast corner of Fillmore and McAllister streets observing the movements of the colliding cars. He testified: “I know that a young man by the name of Gustave Fritz was one of the injured. I remember the man well, both of whose feet were crushed at the ankles. I remember Fritz. I think I picked him up. Fritz was the first one I picked up.”

Under the rule as to the credit to be accorded those witnesses, only one probable inference can be drawn, and that is that Gustave Fritz was a passenger on said Fillmore Street car. Reduced to simple form, it amounts to this: One witness saw several individuals fall from the car onto a certain unoeeupiéd space on the street. Another witness, observing the accident, immediately goes to the spot where these individuals are lying and picks up one of them whose legs are crushed, and who is identified as Gustave Fritz.

*161 The evidence would have no greater probative value if a witness had testified that he was personally acquainted, with said Fritz and saw him fall from the Fillmore Street car at the time of the accident.

In addition, it may be stated, without quoting, that the testimony of Rudolph Wolf, a fellow-passenger of Fritz on the Fillmore Street car, and of Dr. William A. Mundell, who was sitting on the extreme front of the McAllister Street ear, is strongly cumulative. Having been shown to be on the car, the presumption would be that Gustave Fritz was a passenger.

“A person on a train used for carrying passengers is, in the absence of countervailing circumstances, presumed to be a passenger, and rightfully there.” (Louisville etc. Ry. Co. v. Thompson, 107 Ind. 442, [57 Am. Rep. 120, 9 N. E. 357]; People v. Douglass, 87 Cal. 284, 25 Pac. 417].)

It may be, as claimed by appellant, that “the'presumption, however, cannot be raised where a person is only presumed to have been on the car.” But such is not this case. It is not a mere presumption that Fritz was on the car. In fact, it is no presumption at all, but a necessary inference from the facts testified to by the witnesses.

3. It cannot be said that the evidence is insufficient to support a finding of negligence. The passenger having been injured as the result of the operation of defendant’s cars, the presumption of negligence would arise, as the authorities hold. It was for the jury to determine whether this presumption was overcome by the explanation of the accident furnished by appellant’s witnesses. Horton, the motorman of the Fillmore Street car, testified: “The easterly bound McAllister Street car ordinarily stops at the southwesterly corner of Mc-Allister and Fillmore streets. When it did stop it stopped some distance westerly from the westerly track of Fillmore street, the track on which my car was being operated at the time of the collision. If the McAllister Street car bound in an easterly direction had stopped where it ordinarily did stop, and where it should have stopped, at the southwesterly corner of Fillmore and McAllister streets, it would have been some distance from my car. ... I knew that prior to the time of this collision there had been a heavy drizzle. I also knew from my experience as a motorman that this drizzling caused the tracks to become slippery, especially down grade.” The *162 rules of the company required those in charge, before crossing the tracks of intersecting lines, to “bring their cars to a full stop at the near crosswalks, see that the way is clear, and cross tracks at a greatly reduced speed,” and they also provided that “when an intersection occurs at a grade, or at the foot of a grade, or if they are both on the down grade, the car on the steepest grade is to be given the right of way.

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Related

Westervelt v. McCullough
228 P. 734 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)
Bond v. United Railroads of S.F.
147 P. 465 (California Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 P. 982, 24 Cal. App. 157, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-united-railroads-of-san-francisco-calctapp-1914.