Burns v. Jackson

200 P. 80, 53 Cal. App. 345, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 318
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2278.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 200 P. 80 (Burns v. Jackson) 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
Burns v. Jackson, 200 P. 80, 53 Cal. App. 345, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 318 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from a judgment of non-suit. The action was brought originally against five defendants: The Southern Pacific Company, George H. Jackson, Jackson M. Diggs, W. G. McRoberts, and F. G. Prinderville, but on the first trial a nonsuit was granted as to Diggs, Jackson, and McRoberts, the jury exonerated the Southern Pacific Company, and rendered a verdict against Prinderville for the sum of two thousand dollars. An appeal was taken from said judgment of nonsuit and it was affirmed by this court as to Diggs and McRoberts but was reversed as to the defendant, George H. Jackson. (Burns v. Southern Pac. Co., 43 Cal. App. 667, [185 Pac. 875].)

In that decision it was said: “Without setting forth the evidence in detail, it is necessary to say that there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury as to the defendant Prinderville being an employee of the defendant Jackson, and also as to the negligence of the defendant Prinderville in the operation and management of the auto-truck at the time of the collision.”

The motion for nonsuit at the second trial was based upon the contention of an entire lack of evidence that Prinderville was in the employment of Jackson at the time of the accident, which resulted in the death of plaintiff’s son. The view of the trial court was that a difference existed in that respect between the first and the second trial, Prinderville having testified at the former that “he was working for Dr. Jackson, was operating the truck under his control,” while the court proceeded to state: “The testimony is today he was working for Diggs and under his control.” The court continued: “It wasn’t brought out on cross-examination that he was under the pay and employ and control of Diggs; here you have two witnesses, Prinderville states it and so does McRoberts.” In reply to the suggestion of appellant that “all the intendments are in favor of the plaintiff’s side of the case in a motion for nonsuit,” the court said: “When a man says in his testimony, ‘I was work *347 ing for Dr. Jackson, ’ and on cross-examination the facts come out he was working for Tom Smith, you can’t take his testimony on direct examination as an inference or as a presumption or as amounting to anything.” [1] No doubt the learned trial judge was right in the last-quoted assertion, if he meant that the statement of a mere opinion or conclusion by a witness in his direct examination could have no weight as against facts stated by him in his cross-examination which are necessarily opposed to such opinion. [2] However, an irreconcilable conflict between the direct and the cross examination of a witness is not of itself sufficient to justify a nonsuit. The rule upon the subject has been well settled and is fully discussed by this court in the Estate of Daley, 15 Cal. App. 329, [114 Pac. 787], It is sufficient to say that on such motion the evidence must be taken most strongly against the defendant, and if an inference could reasonably arise therefrom in favor of plaintiff’s contention, the motion must be denied. But a consideration of the question of fact involved in said proposition may be deferred until after an inquiry as to the contention of appellant that the trial court, by virtue of the “law of the case,” was under legal compulsion to deny the motion for nonsuit.

[3] The doctrine is well understood, and the parties herein are in accord that where the appellate court has in its opinion stated a rule or principle of law necessary to a decision, that rule or principle must be adhered to and observed throughout the subsequent progress of the case, both in the lower court and upon subsequent appeal, although it may be believed upon further consideration that the former decision in that particular is erroneous. (Westerfield v. New York L. Ins. Co., 157 Cal. 339, [107 Pac. 699].) [4] By the former decision herein it was held that the evidence against respondent was sufficient to be submitted to the jury. If substantially the same evidence appears in this record, said decision, of course, is controlling. It would make no difference if additional evidence was received that might be favorable to respondent. The test is, Was substantially the same evidence favorable to appellant received at the second as at the first trial? As to this, it may be said, that respondent has hot pointed out any difference and we would be justified in concluding from *348 his omission that no difference exists. It is true that he quotes quite freely from the testimony at each trial, but he does not specify the variance upon which he relies. However, we have examined the testimony of the two witnesses, Prinderville and McRoberts, claimed by appellant to be sufficient to show prima facie that the former at the time of the accident was under the exclusive control and direction of Dr. Jackson, and we find no such divergence as to make inapplicable the “law of the case.”

At the first trial Prinderville testified: “On the twenty-seventh'day of June, 1917, I was employed by Jackson as a driver of his truck. "We were hauling empty lug boxes at the time of the accident. We were engaged in hauling fruit from Dr. Jackson’s ranch to Oswald Station, and hauling empties back. I was acting under the direction of Dr. George H. Jackson that day. Defendant McRoberts was superintending the hauling of the fruit. ... I received pay for my work performed for that week from Jackson Diggs. He paid me for all of the week. I did not receive any money from Mr. McRoberts or Dr. Jackson.”

On the second trial his testimony upon this point appeared as follows: “Q. What business were you engaged in on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1917? A. Driving a truck. Q. For whom were you driving the truck? A. Jackson Diggs. . . . What did you do in the afternoon? A. Went out to the orchard, got a load of apricots, took them to Oswald and put them in a car. Q. Who sent you to get the fruit in the orchard? A. Mr. McRoberts. Q. In what orchard was it you got the fruit? A. You mean who owned it? Q. Yes, sir. A. Dr. Jackson, I believe. Q. What did Mr. McRoberts direct you to do? A. Go to the orchard and get a load of the fruit that were there boxed. Q. Whom were you working for that afternoon? A. I presume I was working under Dr. Jackson. Q. You were subject to his orders that afternoon? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. You were paid for this work by Jackson Diggs, of course. A. Yes, sir. Q. And not paid anything at all by Dr. Jackson? A. No, sir.”

At the former hearing McRoberts testified: “I am a fruit-grower and superintendent for defendant Dr. Jackson. That was my business on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1917. I was acquainted with Emmans Franklin Burns in *349 his lifetime. He was working for Dr. Jackson and I was superintending the work.”

At this trial he testified to the same thing but added that Mr. Prinderville hauled some fruit for Dr. Jackson that day and that he probably told Mr. Prinderville that “we had a load of fruit to take down to Oswald.” He also related what occurred after they left the Jackson place, but this is of no consequence. It is true that in the cross-examination he testified that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
200 P. 80, 53 Cal. App. 345, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-jackson-calctapp-1921.