Dayton v. Yellow Cab Co.

193 P.2d 959, 85 Cal. App. 2d 740, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 976
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1948
DocketCiv. 13518
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 959 (Dayton v. Yellow Cab 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
Dayton v. Yellow Cab Co., 193 P.2d 959, 85 Cal. App. 2d 740, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 976 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

FINLEY, J. pro tem.

Defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, following the verdict of a jury, awarding plaintiff the sum of $6,000 for personal injuries.

The action arose as a result of a quarrel involving physical encounter between plaintiff and the defendant Robert Blanc, a cab driver for defendant Yellow Cab Company.

Plaintiff and his wife hired the Yellow Cab driven by defendant Robert Blanc at about 10 o’clock p.m., on May 31, 1944, at 10th and Market Streets in San Francisco, and were • driven to their residence at 33d Avenue and Taraval Street. From this point on there is a conflict in the evidence as to just what happened.

It is unquestioned that prior to the cab ride home that evening plaintiff and his wife had consumed an undetermined amount of intoxicating liquor and had partaken of dinner. On the ride home plaintiff’s wife became ill and vomited. There is a dispute as to whether this took place within or upon a portion of the cab. At any rate when the cab arrived at 33d Avenue and Taraval plaintiff’s wife left the cab and entered her home. Thereafter a dispute arose between plaintiff and defendant Robert Blanc, the driver, over the amount due as fare or for cleaning the cab as the alleged result of vomiting by plaintiff’s wife. Physical encounter between plaintiff and the cab driver followed in which it is admitted that plaintiff sustained a broken leg.

Both sides agree that there is a substantial conflict in the evidence concerning the encounter and which party was the aggressor. No claim is made by appellant that there is insufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. The sole point raised on appeal is that the court erred by giving an instruction on the degree of care owed by a common carrier to a passenger when according to defendant’s theory the relationship *742 of carrier and passenger had ended when plaintiff and his wife safely alighted from the cab and were upon the sidewalk at their destination.

The instruction complained of was offered by plaintiff and reads: “It is the duty of a cab company and its employees to exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of passengers.” Immediately following this the court gave these instructions:

“The basic question for you as a jury to decide in this case is which one of the participants in the struggle which has been described to you wrongfully interjected the use of physical force into the settlement of the conversation which was taking place. If you find that the cab driver was the original wrongdoer by virtue of the fact that he interjected the use of physical force, you are hereby instructed that if thereafter the passenger, Dayton, took steps or took such an action which any reasonable person would take in attempting to defend himself, and that his action coupled with the action of the cab driver resulted in physical injury to the plaintiff, then I instruct you that you must render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of damages which are shown to have resulted from the injury.
“If you find that the cab driver was the assailant or the one who started the attack in this case, you are instructed that Dayton had the right under the law to defend himself against this attack by using such force as' was reasonably necessary to resist the attack of the cab driver. If you find that during the scuffle that followed that plaintiff was injured, either by reason of action of the cab driver alone, or by reason of the combined action of Dayton and the cab driver, in a fray wrongfully started by the cab driver, then I instruct you that you must render a verdict of this matter in favor of the plaintiff.
“If you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff Dayton kicked at and attacked Robert Blanc, who was the cab driver of the cab in question, without any cause or provocation and that Mr. Blanc, the cab driver, in self defense used only such force as was reasonably necessary to repel the attack of plaintiff, then it is your duty to render a verdict against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendants Yellow Cab Company of San Francisco and Robert Blanc, for it is the law of this State that one attacked may use such force as may be necessary to protect himself from wrongful injury attempted to b.e inflicted upon him by .another.”

*743 On pages 13 and 14 of their opening brief defendants outline their objection to the instruction first quoted above as follows:

“We do not question but that there was a duty to exercise no more than necessary force in repelling the assault, if the plaintiff were the aggressor. This, of course, is the rule in any assault and battery case. Civil Section 50. It was, however, most prejudicial to confuse the true basis of the responsibility of the defendants with the doctrine of the highest degree of care. The latter pertains only to the contract of carriage. It was conclusively shown by the evidence that such contract of carriage had been completely performed.
“The jury in all likelihood surmised that, under the doctrine of ‘the highest degree of care,’ the cab driver should have left the scene and abandoned his cab. However, under the doctrine of reasonable care, if that had been properly given to the jury, the latter would have had leeway to decide that the defendant driver was warranted in taking the course adopted by him.
“That the relationship of passenger and carrier had terminated, at the time of the incident involved in this case, permits of no doubt. The defendants were therefore no longer liable to the plaintiff in the operation ‘as a carrier’ nor were the defendants bound to use ‘the highest degree of care’; defendants were, at the most, liable under general rules of tort.”

While it is undoubtedly true that doctrine of the “highest degree of care” pertains only to the contract of carriage we cannot agree with defendants that such a contract begins and ends absolutely upon the passenger’s boarding and alighting from the vehicle of carriage. In so holding we are not unmindful of the rule approved in the early case of Falls v. San Francisco etc. R. R. Co., 97 Cal. 114 [31 P. 901], cited by defendants which rule is outlined in that opinion as follows:

“ ‘The passenger while in actual progress upon his journey is exposed to countless hazards, gives himself wholly in charge of the carrier. . . . But a rule properly ceases with the reason for it; therefore, as a passenger’s entrance to the carrier’s station is characterized by none of the hazards incident to the journey itself, the rigor of the rule above announced [that is the rule of highest degree of care] is justly relaxed, in that at such a time and place the carrier is bound to ex- *744 ereise only a reasonable degree of care for the protection of its passengers. ’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 959, 85 Cal. App. 2d 740, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-yellow-cab-co-calctapp-1948.