Deibler v. Wright

6 P.2d 344, 119 Cal. App. 277, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketDocket No. 7959.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 344 (Deibler v. Wright) 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
Deibler v. Wright, 6 P.2d 344, 119 Cal. App. 277, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 76 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

Plaintiff sued through her guardian for damages resulting from an automobile collision. The cause was tried with a jury which returned a verdict in the sum of $7,500. The defendant Wright has appealed upon typewritten transcripts.

The collision occurred on February 23, 1930, on the highway running from Oakland through the Livermore Valley. Plaintiff was a child of fourteen years of age. She was riding in a Chrysler ear which was driven by her father, and guardian herein, in a westerly direction along a straight stretch of the highway about two and one-half miles west of Livermore. At the same time defendant was traveling easterly along the same highway directly behind a large truck. The Chrysler car was traveling at a speed of about thirty miles per hour. The truck was traveling at a speed of about twenty-five to "thirty miles per hour, and the defendant had followed the truck at the same speed for about two miles. The highway was paved for a width of eighteen feet, with a graveled shoulder on each side approximately ten feet wide. The surface of the paved portion was rippled or “washboardy”, and a slight rain had made it wet and slippery. As the defendant approached the slow-moving truck she passed it going to the left side of the pavement, and as she turned in on her own side of the highway in front of the truck her car skidded so that the rear wheels went completely off the pavement and on to the shoulder on the right-hand side of the highway and her car then skidded to the left so that it ■ was forced directly across the highway and in the path of the ear in which plaintiff was riding. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that when the defendant first left her lane of traffic behind the truck her car was at a distance of one hundred feet from the car in which plaintiff was riding. Aside from lowering his speed from thirty to twenty miles per hour the plaintiff’s father did nothing to prevent the collision though the skidding of defendant’s car was plainly seen by all occupants of the Chrysler. The evidence *280 is without serious conflict except as to the matter of the speed of the respective cars and the distance between the two at the time the defendant turned out to pass the truck. Disinterested witnesses on the part of the defendant testified that the plaintiff’s car was from two hundred to three hundred feet away when the defendant made this turn. Plaintiff’s father and others riding with him testified that this distance was not more than one hundred feet. The truck was drawing a trailer and the full length of the truck and trailer was forty-five or fifty feet. The admitted speed of the truck was from twenty to thirty miles per hour, the speed of defendant’s car while passing it was from forty to fifty miles per hour. It was, of course, a mathematical impossibility for defendant to turn out and pass this moving truck, reach the right side of the highway in front of the truck, and then pass to the left side again, within the distance described by the plaintiff’s witnesses, a distance which was, of course, shortened by the approach of plaintiff’s car. The evidence is uncontradicted, however, that she did pass the truck, went out to the right-hand shoulder of the highway and then skidded at right angles to the left-hand side, so that the right front fender of defendant’s car was struck by the left front fender of the Chrysler. If the question before us were solely whether the evidence of defendant’s negligence sustained the verdict we might be compelled to close our eyes to the physical conditions and accept the jury’s judgment as final. Because of the errors occurring during the trial, which will hereafter be noted, and because the evidence taken at a new trial may be different from what we have here it would serve no purpose to say whether in our judgment the evidence of defendant’s negligence is sufficient to support the verdict. It is sufficient to point out, as we have done, that it was an extremely close question whether the collision was caused by any act of omission or commission on the part of the defendant, or whether it was the result of inevitable accident, and that, for this reason, the errors complained of become the more prejudicial.

The appellant insists that the verdict is excessive, that it was the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury caused by misconduct on the part of the respondent’s counsel, and the errors in the instruction given to the jury which permitted the jury to take into consideration in award *281 ing damages a pre-existing ailment of the respondent. We are satisfied that for both of these reasons the judgment must be reversed.

The misconduct of counsel for the respondent occurred in his examination of plaintiff’s father in rebuttal. Specific objection is made to the following portion of the transcript:

“Mr. Johnson: Q. I will ask you this, Mr. Deibler, during ,the course of the World War, did you serve as an officer in the United States army?
“Mr. Harris: I object to that as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and assign the asking of it as misconduct and prejudicial error.
“The Court: I don’t think it is that, but I am rather inclined to think it is irrelevant.
“Mr. Johnson: I will take a ruling. I am going to try to develop the fact with no idea of trenching upon the court’s position.
“The Court: The objection will be sustained.
“Mr. Johnson: Q. Were you Mr. Deibler examined during the course of the World War by physicians of the United States army as a suspected tubercular case?
“Mr. Harris: The same objection, your Honor.
“The Court: The same ruling.
“Mr. Johnson: Q. Were you, Mr. Deibler, sent to any hospital maintained by the United States government for the purpose of further examination in that regard?
“Mr. Harris: The same objection, and the same assignment.
“The Court: The same ruling.
“Mr. Johnson: All right.
“Q. Subsequent to the World War, Mr. Deibler, state whether or not you have continuously been an officer in the United States reserve corps.
“Mr. Harris: The same objection and the same assignment.
‘1 The Court: That will also be sustained.
“Mr. Johnson: Q. Mr. Deibler, have you yearly since the World War been examined physically, particularly for tuberculosis by physicians of the United States government?
“Mr. Harris: The same objection and the same assignment.
*282 “The Court: The objection will be sustained. If these things are true, the people who made these examinations are the proper ones to come here and testify.
“Mr. Johnson: It is certainly proper to show he has been examined.
“The Court: He can’t testify as to the result of the examination.
“Mr. Johnson: I didn’t ask him any question of that kind.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 344, 119 Cal. App. 277, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deibler-v-wright-calctapp-1931.