Burns v. Jackson

211 P. 821, 59 Cal. App. 662, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 175
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 2523.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 211 P. 821 (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, 211 P. 821, 59 Cal. App. 662, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 175 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was for damages for the death of a minor son, and plaintiff was awarded by a jury the sum of $5,250, and judgment was thereupon entered in his favor for that amount. The son was killed in a collision between a Southern Pacific motor passenger car and an autotruck owned by one Jackson Diggs, one of the original defendants herein, operated by one F. G. Prinderville. also a former defendant, who, it is claimed by respondent, was in the special service and under the control of appellant Jackson through his superintendent, W. G. McRoberts, at the time of the collision.

The cause has been before this court on two former occasions. In Burns v. Southern Pacific Company et al., 43 Cal. App. 667 [185 Pac. 875], the facts are quite, fully stated, and therein it was said:

*664 “The fact that Diggs was the owner of the truck, and that the defendant Prinderville was in his general employ as a chauffeur, appears to be the only cause for having joined him in this action, but, as the testimony shows without contradiction that at the time of the collision referred to both truck and chauffeur were under the control and management of the defendant Jackson, the correctness of the ruling of the court as to the defendant Diggs requires no further mention.”

Furthermore, it was said:

“Without setting forth the evidence in detail, it is only necessary to say 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 his operation and management of the autotruck at the time of the collision.”

This court, therefore, ordered the judgment of nonsuit in favor of the defendants Diggs and McRoberts rendered in the trial court to be affirmed and the judgment of nonsuit in favor of defendant Jackson to be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial as to him. It may be added that upon the first trial a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff against Prinderville and for defendant company for its costs, and there was no appeal as to either of these defendants.

The ease went back for a new trial as to Jackson and again a judgment of nonsuit was rendered in his favor. An appeal was taken and the judgment reversed, as reported in Burns v. Jackson, 53 Cal. App. 345 [200 Pac. 80], Therein it was held that substantially the same evidence as to the liability of defendant Jackson appeared at the second as a.t the first trial and, therefore, the principle of the “law of the case” was applicable. In the opinion is set out the testimony of the two witnesses, Prinderville and McRoberts, at both trials, which it is not necessary to repeat. This appeal is by the defendant Jackson from the judgment rendered against him after the third trial, and the main contention of appellant is that the verdict is entirely unsupported, since the evidence shows without conflict that Prinderville was in the employ and under the direction and control of Diggs, and, hence, Jackson was in nowise responsible for the negligence of the driver of said auto- *665 truck at the time of the collision. Preliminarily, it may be stated that the conclusion as to the liability of Jackson at all the trials rested wholly upon the testimony of Prinderville and McBoberts, that a petition for a rehearing was denied by the supreme court after said decisions were rendered by this court and appellant’s counsel, who represented Diggs in the opposition to the petition of the plaintiff in the supreme court for a hearing after said first decision of this court holding that the nonsuit as to him was properly granted, contended that there was no evidence that Prinderville was under the control and direction of Diggs and, therefore, the latter could not be held responsible for the former’s negligQnce. In other words, while representing Diggs alone, they earnestly sought to make it appear that Jackson was the responsible employer, but herein, while representing Jackson alone, they are equally insistent that the liability belongs to Diggs. It is due counsel, though, to say that they claim the evidence at the last trial to be different from the first, in that the testimony of Prinderville was not the same. To support this position attention is called to the fact that at the last trial he testified that he had full control of the truck, that he had full power to stop and to start it when he pleased, that nobody had any control over him in doing that work, -that he was then the employee of Jackson Diggs, and that neither Dr. Jackson nor Mr. McBoberts directed him in any particular as to how he should run the truck, whereas at the first and second trials he testified that he was working for Dr. Jackson, subject entirely to his orders, to go with his truck and drive it wherever he was directed and without anything being said by Diggs at all. Hence, it is concluded that the principle of “the law of the case’’ is inapplicable since it presupposes that the facts are substantially the same and has no application where the facts alleged and found are materially different from those considered on a former appeal. (Esrey v. Southern Pac. Co., 103 Cal. 541 [37 Pac. 500]; Moore v. Pratt, 162 Cal. 268 [122 Pac. 462]; Kramm v. Stockton Electric R. Co., 10 Cal. App. 271 [101 Pac. 914].)

But it is to be observed that Prinderville admitted that at the" first trial he testified that he was working for Dr. George IT. Jackson that day, and subject entirely to his *666 orders, to go with, the truck and drive it wherever he directed him without anything being said by Jackson Diggs at all. In explanation of the apparent discrepancy he made the following reply to the questions asked by counsel for appellant as follows: “Q. Well now, Mr. Prinderville, in this testimony here, as I understand, on the 27th day of June, 1917, while you were in the employ of Jackson Diggs on that day, you were working for Dr. Jackson. You mean by that you were hauling Dr. Jackson’s fruit? A. Yes sir. Q. As you said today? A. Yes sir. Q. (Beading) : ‘And subject to his orders entirely?’ That is, that you were hauling fruit he told you to haul? A. Yes sir, hauling fruit he told me to haul and when he told me to haul it. Q. (Beading); ‘And to go with your truck and drive it wherever he directed you to?’ A. Yes sir. Q. That is true, wasn’t it? A. Yes sir. Q. (Beading) : ‘And without anything being said by Jackson Diggs at all?’ A. Yes sir. Q. That is true, and that is what you say today? A. Yes sir. Q. You still say, do you, that so far as the management of the truck was concerned, you controlled that absolutely yourself, drove it as you pleased, stopped it when you pleased, controlled absolutely without anything being said by Dr. Jackson or any of his employees? A. Yes sir.”

We can see no substantial difference in the facts to which the witness testified at the various trials, the only difference being in the inference or opinion of the witness as to who was his employer. His opinion at the first two trials was that he was in the employ of Dr. Jackson, while at the last trial, for some reason or other, his judgment was that Mr. Diggs was his employer and that he was responsible to him.

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 821, 59 Cal. App. 662, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-jackson-calctapp-1922.