City of Sacramento v. Hunger

249 P. 223, 79 Cal. App. 234, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 163
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3033.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 P. 223 (City of Sacramento v. Hunger) 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
City of Sacramento v. Hunger, 249 P. 223, 79 Cal. App. 234, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 163 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiff in this action sues for damages in the total sum of twelve hundred dollars for damage alleged to have been done to a police armored automobile belonging to said city in a collision between said automobile and the automobile of the defendant, William F. L. Hunger, and also for expenses paid by plaintiff for medical services rendered to one of its police officers for physical injuries sustained by the latter by reason of said collision, said officer being in the police car at the time of the mishap.

The cause was tried before a jury and a verdict rendered for the defendants. The appeal is by the plaintiff from the judgment entered upon said verdict.

The defendant William J. Hunger is the father of the other defendant, the latter, so the complaint states, being, at the time of the collision, a minor.

The accident occurred between 11 and 12 o’clock on the night of the tenth day of January, 1925, at the intersec *237 tion of Seventh and L Streets, in the City of Sacramento. Just prior to the happening of the collision the police department received a notice by telephone that a burglar was carrying on criminal operations at or near a residence in the neighborhood of Seventh and Y Street, in said city. Immediately two police officers, George A. Kaminsky and A. P. Noone, were dispatched to the scene of the burglarious operations in an armored automobile and drove from the police station at Sixth and H Streets to Seventh Street, thence along the last-named street in a southerly direction. The police car and that of the defendant William F. L. Hunger, driving over and along L Street in a westerly direction, collided, with the result that the police car was seriously damaged and Officer Noone likewise injured, and the ear of Hunger also damaged.

The contention of the plaintiff is that the verdict is minus sufficient evidentiary support and that prejudicial error was committed by the trial court in certain particulars in its charge to the jury. In its opening brief the plaintiff makes the following concession: “It may be granted that at the time the two cars arrived at the intersection, as above stated, it was too late to avoid an accident, and that an emergency was created thereby which would relieve either of the operators of the automobiles from liability for the accident itself, because, assuming that the defendant, William P. L. Hunger, by proper presence of mind, might have obviated the collision with the police car, the emergency was so great at that time he could not be chargeable for taking the wrong method.”

The following further statement, however, is made in said brief in connection with the foregoing admission: “The police car was equipped with a siren which was sounded continuously from the time of leaving the police station at 6th and H Streets, until almost the instant of the collision at 7th and L Streets, the distance from the Police Station to the point of the accident being approximately five city blocks.”

It will thus be observed that the plaintiff, in its claim that the accident was due to the negligence of the defendant Wm. P. L. Hunger, relies entirely upon the proposition that he (said Hunger) failed, upon the sounding of the siren or signal attached to the police car, to obey the *238 mandates of section 133 of the State Vehicle Act. Said section provides: “Upon the approach of any police or fire department vehicle, it shall be the duty of the operator of any street car, upon the sounding of a signal by such police or fire department vehicle, to stop such street car forthwith, unless at the time such street car is crossing an intersection of the public highways, in which event it shall be operated so as to clear the intersection of the highways and then .stopped, and every other vehicle shall immediately be moved to a position as near as possible and parallel to the righthand curb, and shall remain there until the police or fire department apparatus has passed such vehicle.”

The point that the verdict is destitute of sufficient evidentiary support is practically reduced to the simple question whether the siren signal connected with the police ear was sounded or being sounded as said car was proceeding along the streets to the point of destination of the officers, and, if so, whether the defendant Wm. F. L. Hunger at any time heard it.

The two officers who were in the car, one (Kaminsky) at the wheel and at the same time manipulating the siren connection so as to give the usual warning of the approach of the car, testified that the speed at which said car was driven at no time exceeded that of thirty-five miles an hour and that the siren was continually sounded as they were passing along the streets from the time they (the officers) left the police station to the time they reached the point where the collision occurred. Each of the officers stated that “the siren was going all the time.” Six other parties who, just before and at the time of the collision, were on the streets along which the police car was then being driven in a southerly direction from the point where the police station is located, each testified that he heard the sound of the siren from the time his attention was attracted to said car by the signal sound until the car reached Seventh and L Streets, where the collision took place. Some of these witnesses were, at the time the accident happened, within a few yards of the point of collision, one or two not so near and others practically at the corner.

*239 The defendant Wm. F. L. Hunger testified that he was driving his car on L Street in a westerly direction; that he had been driving at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour and continued to drive at that rate of speed as he approached and was in the act of crossing L, Street at Seventh; that after he had reached a point near the center of the intersection of Seventh and L Streets his attention was attracted to the police car by the rapid rate of speed at which the latter car was being driven and also the headlights thereof; that, instantly apprehending the danger of a collision with the approaching police car, and in the hope of avoiding a collision, he suddenly swerved his car to the left or in a southerly direction—the same direction in which the police car was going—but had hardly more than made that movement when the two cars collided. He further testified that, when first his attention was attracted to the police car, said car was at a point a trifle south of the alley between K and L Streets, the first-named street being north of the last named, and that said car, according to his best judgment, was traveling at a rate of speed of between forty and fifty miles an hour. Said defendant did not say whether he at any time heard the sound of the siren attached to the police car, nor was he asked, either on direct or cross-examination, whether he heard the siren.

A witness by the name of Jackson, residing in the alley between L and M Streets, and whose home “faces towards L Street,” testified (for the defendants) that he was in his house engaged in a conversation with one Jim Brown, when he heard the “crash” caused by the collision. He testified that, prior to hearing the “crash,” he did not hear the sound of the siren on the police car. He stated that he could not fix the time in the evening at which the collision occurred, but that at the time “of the accident it was getting dark—along getting dusk.

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 223, 79 Cal. App. 234, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sacramento-v-hunger-calctapp-1926.