Davis v. Lane

75 P.2d 565, 24 Cal. App. 2d 400, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 919
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1938
DocketCiv. 5860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 P.2d 565 (Davis v. Lane) 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
Davis v. Lane, 75 P.2d 565, 24 Cal. App. 2d 400, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 919 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This action was begun by Ruth C. Davis, plaintiff and appellant, the daughter of Thomas L. Davis, deceased, against the respondents, Paul Kunde, Gene Morrison and Henry Lane, to recover damages for and on account of the death of Thomas L. Davis, occasioned on or about April 14, 1936, in a collision between an electric ear belonging to Sacramento Northern Railway, and operated by Thomas L. Davis, and a truck owned by Kunde and Morrison and operated by Lane. The Sacramento Northern Railway intervened in the action and filed a complaint against Kunde and Morrison to recover the amount of damages given to the electric car by reason of the collision. The respondent, Paul Kunde, filed a cross-complaint against the railway company for damages to the truck. No damages were awarded to any of the parties herein. From this judgment the plaintiff, and also the Sacramento Northern Railway, appeals.

After making findings as to the relation of the plaintiff to the deceased, Thomas L. Davis, the amount of his compensation or earnings per month, the damages to the truck, and the damages to the electric ear, the court made the following finding, the incorrectness of which furnishes the basis for the appeals just mentioned. The finding challenged is in the following words and figures:

*402 “The court finds the fact to be that at the time and place above set forth, Thomas L. Davis and cross-defendant, Sacramento Northern Railway, a corporation, were themselves guilty of contributory negligence in and about the matters and things in said complaint set forth, in this: That while at said time and place said Thomas L. Davis did blow a whistle at a point from about 750 to about 950 feet from the said crossing, the court finds said Thomas L. Davis to have given said warning in an insufficient time and at an insufficient distance to constitute a timely warning of the approach of said car to defendants Henry Lane and Paul Kunde, and the giving of said warning in insufficient time and at an insufficient distance as aforesaid, was a material, contributing element to the proximate cause of the death of said Thomas L. Davis.”

That this finding is not supported by the evidence and is contrary to any rational conclusion or legal conclusion that can be drawn from the testimony, clearly appears from what is set out in the transcript in this cause. The evidence set out in the appellant’s briefs is admitted to be substantially correct by the respondents Lane, Kunde and Morrison.

The record shows that on or about April 14, 1936, at 12:10 P. M. a collision occurred at what is known as “Harker’s Crossing”, a private crossing about two miles northwest of Tuba City in Sutter County, between an electric car owned by the Sacramento Northern Railway, and operated by Thomas L. Davis, now deceased, and a truck owned by the respondents, Kunde and Morrison, and operated by the respondent Lane, an employee of Kunde. The track extends in an easterly and westerly direction. The private road extends in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction. To the east of the crossing the railroad line is straight for over a mile. From a distance 20 feet back from the northerly rail the view of the track is unobstructed all the way to Tuba City (practically two miles). From a point 30 feet measured at right angles north from the northerly rail, but 38 feet from the crossing, the view of the track is unobstructed in an easterly direction for a distance of 875 feet. From a point 40 feet north of the northerly rail and 51 feet from the crossing, the track is unobstructed to the east for a distance of 570 feet. From a point 51 feet north of the northerly rail, and 60 feet from the crossing, the track to the east is unobstructed *403 for a distance of 445 feet. It was a clear day. The truck and trailer and semi-trailer had just been loaded with a little less than 24 tons of boxed prunes. The truck was traveling in a southerly direction toward the crossing in direct second gear, at a speed of between 4 and 6 miles per hour. The respondent Kunde, who was riding with respondent Lane, the operator of the truck, did not look to the left at any time. The truck could have stopped, according to the testimony, within 7 or 8 feet. The truck, trailer, and semitrailer was 59 feet long. The testimony shows that the driver, Lane, looked to the east only once before reaching the rails from a point about 30 to 33 feet from the north rail, and testified that he did not see the car. The car was proceeding in a westerly direction at a speed of about 45 miles per hour at the time the brakes were applied. There was a whistling-post 977.3 feet from the center of the crossing, and a switch located 760.3 feet from the center of the crossing. The whistle of the electric car was blown between the whistling-post and the switch, and was continually blown until the time of the collision. The brakes of the electric car were applied at or near the switch. The car signaled for the crossing by giving one long blast just as it passed the whistling-post, and as we have stated, continued whistling until it reached the point of the collision. Neither the driver nor the occupant of the truck saw the car until the cab of the truck was on the track. They testified that they did not hear the whistling of the car until they had reached that point; that the car at that time was about 200 feet away, and that it was the first time they saw the ear or heard the whistle. The testimony shows that the driver of the truck did not stop, look or listen before driving upon the track.

The court found, as heretofore shown, that Thomas L. Davis was negligent in not giving timely warning of the approach of the electric car. This, as shown by an excerpt of the court’s opinion hereinafter set forth, appears to have been based upon the conclusion that the whistle of the electric car was not blown at a distance of 1320 feet from the crossing, as required of steam locomotives by section 486 of the Civil Code.

A considerable portion of the briefs is devoted to the argument as to whether section 486, supra, applies to electric railroads, apparently overlooking the fact that this court, in *404 the case of Lininger v. San Francisco V. & Napa Valley R. Co., 18 Cal. App. 411 [123 Pac. 235], has definitely held that section 486, supra, does not apply to electric railways. This decision not having been overruled or modified in any particular by any decision of the Supreme Court, must be held binding upon us upon this appeal, and needs no further consideration, other than to state that any conclusion of the trial court based thereon, as applied to electric railways, in determining the timely distance from a crossing at which the whistle on the car should be blown, is clearly erroneous.

The finding of the court to the effect that timely warning was not given by the sounding of the whistle of the electric car at a distance greater than 950 feet from the crossing, in view of the testimony of the driver of the truck and the respondent Kunde, that they did not hear the sounding of the whistle until the car was within 200 feet of the crossing, is not only illogical but has no basis whatever in the record for its support.

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Bluebook (online)
75 P.2d 565, 24 Cal. App. 2d 400, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-lane-calctapp-1938.