Carnahan v. Motor Transit Co.

224 P. 143, 65 Cal. App. 402, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 604
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4420.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 224 P. 143 (Carnahan v. Motor Transit 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
Carnahan v. Motor Transit Co., 224 P. 143, 65 Cal. App. 402, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 604 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Appellant was the owner of an auto-stage line operated between the city of Bakersfield and the city of Los Angeles. On September 17, 1920, respondent’s intestate, George Schuster, was a passenger in one of appellant’s stages and shortly after leaving San Fernando on its regular trip from Bakersfield to Los Angeles, and while passing along and upon San Fernando Boulevard said stage collided with another automobile standing upon said highway, and as a result of said, collision the said George Schuster was seriously injured. This action was instituted by him to recover damages against appellant and the defendant, *405 the General Pipe Line Company, a corporation. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Schuster in the sum of twelve thousand five hundred dollars against both of the defendants in said action. Upon a motion for a new trial the court granted the same as to the defendant, the General Pipe Line Company, but denied said motion as to appellant. After the perfecting of said appeal the said Schuster died and respondent was appointed special administrator of his estate, and as such is contesting said appeal.

The circumstances of said collision were as follows: San Fernando Boulevard is a paved highway, the paved portion thereof being about twenty feet in width. Near to said highway and parallel with it the defendant, the General Pipe Line Company, maintains a pipe-line for the purpose of conducting oil through the same. Shortly after dark on the day of the collision this pipe-line broke and the oil therein ran out upon said highway, and at the point in said highway where the collision occurred it extended across the entire width of the paved portion of said highway and was from one to five inches in depth. Just before the accident an Italian, with a truckload of watermelons, was traveling upon said highway going from a point near San Fernando to the city of Los Angeles. When his truck encountered the oil on the highway it began to slip and skid and finally came to a full stop, practically across the highway and on the northerly side thereof, its rear wheels resting near the northerly edge of the pavement and its front wheels standing at about the center of said pavement with its radiator pointing south. An auto-stage, belonging to the Original Stage Line, which left San Fernando a few minutes before the one in which Schuster was riding, was following the truck and was probably five hundred feet behind the truck. The driver thereof, observing lights in front of him, drove his stage slightly to the south side of the highway and stopped the same about opposite the truck standing across the highway, and about three feet therefrom. The stage of appellant, after leaving San Fernando for Los Angeles, proceeded down the highway and encountered the oil thereon about one hundred feet distant from the scene of the collision. The driver, however, failed to discover the presence of the oil until his car began to slip and skid on the highway as a result of oil 'being thereon. He testi *406 fled that he then endeavored, by first applying his brakes and then by changing to second speed and shutting off the power, to control his car. These efforts on his part were ineffectual and his car crashed into the rear of the stage belonging to the Original Stage Line standing on the highway as above described. The grade of the highway from San Fernando to the point of collision was a slight downgrade of about two per cent. The car in which the deceased was riding was equipped with two headlights and a spot light, but these lights did not light up the highway in front of the ear for a distance of over one hundred feet. The highway was of asphaltum and was similar in color to the black oil flowing thereon. The driver stated that he was traveling, at the time he encountered the oil, at a rate of speed not exceeding twenty-five miles per hour, while there was other testimony which placed the speed of his car at this time as high as forty miles per hour. There was nothing to obscure from his view the truck standing across the highway, nor the stage of the Original Stage Line standing opposite the truck, nor the tail light of the latter car, at least not until he ran into the oil, when, according to his testimony, the oil splashed against the windshield of his car and made it difficult to see objects ahead of him. The oil, however, was not encountered to any extent until he was within one hundred feet of the point of the collision.

The first ground advanced by appellant for a reversal of the judgment is that the complaint does not state a cause of action against the appellant. It is alleged in the complaint that “The employee of defendant, Motor Transit Company . . . negligently and' carelessly caused said stage then and there to collide with, and vigorously to strike, an automobile.” Appellant contends that in the foregoing allegation there is no fact alleged at all, but the mere conclusion of the pleader is stated, that is, that the driver “negligently and carelessly caused said stage to collide with an automobile.” Had the complaint alleged that the employee of appellant carelessly and negligently drove his stage against another automobile, appellant concedes that it would have stated a good cause of action, but that when it alleges that the employee carelessly and negligently caused his stage to collide with another automobile, it fails to state the necessary facts. No authority is cited *407 by appellant which supports its contention. The case of Smith v. Buttner, 90 Cal. 95 [27 Pac. 29], comes as near to being an authority in appellant’s favor as -any case cited in its brief, but the facts in that case were so different from those before us that it is of but little assistance in the decision of the present action. There was no demurrer, either general or special, filed to the complaint in this action. Neither was there any objection to any testimony offered in support thereof on the 'ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The case was tried upon the assumption that the complaint was sufficient, and as the objection now made to it goes more to the form than to .the substance of its allegations, it is too late to raise for the first time such an objection after judgment. It is true that the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action may be made at any stage of the trial, and even after judgment, but this rule only applies when there is a total want of facts stated in the complaint and not to an imperfect or defective statement of the necessary facts. As was said in the case of Arnold v. American Ins. Co., 148 Cal. 660-663 [25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 6, 84 Pac. 182, 183] : “Pacts essential to a cause of action appearing by reasonable implication only, and allegations made in the form of a legal conclusion, which merely implied the necessary material facts, have been held sufficient as against such an objection (one made after judgment). An example of this is the case of Penrose v. Winter, 135 Cal. 289 [67 Pac. 772], where there was no other allegation of the essential fact of nonpayment except the allegation that ‘there is now due and owing, ’ etc.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P. 143, 65 Cal. App. 402, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnahan-v-motor-transit-co-calctapp-1924.