Brown v. Beck

220 P. 14, 63 Cal. App. 686, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 326
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4599.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 220 P. 14 (Brown v. Beck) 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
Brown v. Beck, 220 P. 14, 63 Cal. App. 686, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 326 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 688 Mathew D. Brown, while crossing Montgomery Street, in San Francisco, was struck down by a motor-truck negligently driven by an employee of the defendant. Mr. Brown sustained serious injuries which resulted in his death. Plaintiff brought this action as the *Page 689 widow and heir at law of her deceased husband. The cause was tried before a jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars. From the judgment entered on the verdict defendant appeals, urging as grounds for reversal, (1) that the verdict is excessive; (2) that the injuries were not the proximate cause of the death of decedent; (3) the plaintiff did not have legal capacity to sue; (4) certain instructions, given by the court to the jury, were erroneous.

Mr. Brown's right hip bone was broken. He was taken to a hospital almost immediately after the accident, where he remained until his death. During his enforced inactivity in the hospital, and in spite of attendants moving him as much as possible to counteract the tendency, he contracted congestive pneumonia, a common danger in cases necessitating a recumbent position and inaction. He rallied from this attack, the pneumonia seemingly disappearing. He improved to such a degree that for a month a nurse and an orderly had supported him in getting him out of bed and attempting to develop the use of his injured leg. From this he went to using crutches. While demonstrating to his physician in his hospital room his ability to move with their aid, he suddenly fell backward, striking the back of his neck on a window-sill. He immediately stated to his physician that he was paralyzed; his arms were numb and he was unable to use his legs. An X-ray showed a bone of the neck broken and the spinal cord injured. Within a few days thereafter, having been forced to lie entirely quiet in bed on account of the severe pain attendant on moving him, he again developed congestive pneumonia, and died. The autopsy surgeon of the coroner's office found death was caused by valvular disease of the heart, coupled with an acute congestion of the lungs.

At the time of the accident deceased was a man of fifty-seven years of age; he had, according to his attending physicians, a leaking heart, which compensated; hardening of the arteries and signs of a chronic pleurisy; to all of which the physicians attached little importance as affecting his chances of recovery from the accident which necessitated his hospital care, or of living his allotted span. Counsel stipulated that by the American experience table of mortality *Page 690 the expectancy of life of the average man of fifty-seven years is 16.1 years.

[1] The defendant attacks the verdict of seven thousand five hundred dollars upon the ground that it was excessive, the excess appearing to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 657, subd. 5.) When injured, deceased was temporarily employed and receiving $18.75 per week. This evidence, as a criterion of his earning capacity, is all the court allowed to be admitted. On this basis the verdict of the jury represented about one-half of what he would have earned had he continued working at the same salary for the period of his expectancy of life. [2] But aside from this, where the law furnishes no rule for the measure of damages, their assessment is peculiarly the province of the jury, and the court will never interfere with the verdict merely on the ground of excess. The amount of the verdict is not suggestive of either passion, prejudice, or corruption. The damages must be flagrantly outrageous and extravagant or the court cannot undertake to draw the line. We are bound to confine our consideration to the record, and the record on its face does not show passion or prejudice. (Anderson v. SanFrancisco-Oakland Terminal Rys., 61 Cal.App. 21 [214 P. 289]; Howland v. Oakland Ry. Co., 110 Cal. 513, 523 [42 P. 983]; Redfield v. Oakland Ry. Co., 110 Cal. 277 [42 P. 822, 1063]; Tedford v. Los Angeles Electric Co., 134 Cal. 76 [54 L. R. A. 85, 66 P. 76]; Hale v. San Bernardino Traction Co.,156 Cal. 713 [106 P. 83]; Evarts v. Santa Barbara Ry. Co., 3 Cal.App. 712 [86 P. 830]; 13 Cyc. 123; Blackwell v. American FilmCo., 189 Cal. 689 [209 P. 999].)

Defendant contends that the injuries were not the proximate cause of death. The study of the origin of the doctrine of proximate cause is alluring. Much of interest has been written upon the subject. Space, time, and requirement of the problem before us merely permit hasty reference to its derivation and unfoldment. "He that does the first wrong shall answer for all consequential damages," said Lord Holt in Roswell v. Prior, 12 Mod. 639. In 1773 Chief Justice DeGrey said: "Everyone who does an unlawful act is considered the doer of all that follows" (Scott v. Shepherd, 2 W. Black. 892, 899). Later the courts attempted *Page 691 to limit this responsibility. Lord Kenyon, in Ashley v.Harrison [1793], 1 Esp. 48, pointed out that "the injury complained of was too remote." In 1806 Lord Ellenborough, inVicars v. Wilcocks, 8 East, 1, said that "the damages must be the legal and natural consequences of the words spoken." Sergeant Wild, in Ward v. Weeks [1830], 7 Bing. 211, 212, expressed this idea: "a man is liable only for the natural and proximate consequences resulting directly from some intermediate agent." The principle was stated in America in 1848 by Greenleaf (2 Greenl. Ev., 1st ed., 258) as follows: "The damages to be recovered must always be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of." In an early case in this state (Hawthorne v. Siegel, 88 Cal. 159 [22 Am. St. Rep. 291, 25 P. 1114]), an action for damages for trespass, we find our supreme court making a broad application of the principle. The supreme court adopted the definition given by the United States supreme court in Aetna v. Boon,95 U.S. 117, 130 [24 L.Ed. 395, see, also, Rose's U.S. Notes], as follows: "The proximate cause is the efficient cause, the one that necessarily sets the other causes in operation"; made the following quotation from Brady v. Northwestern Ins. Co.,11 Mich. 425: "That which is the actual cause of the loss, whether operating directly, or by putting intervening agencies, the operation of which could not be reasonably avoided, in motion, by which the loss is produced, is the cause to which such loss should be attributed"; approved the following language fromWood v. Currey, 57 Cal. 208

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Bluebook (online)
220 P. 14, 63 Cal. App. 686, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-beck-calctapp-1923.