Dowd v. Atlas Taxicab & Auto Service Co.

202 P. 870, 187 Cal. 523, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 386
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9463. S. F. No. 9465.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 202 P. 870 (Dowd v. Atlas Taxicab & Auto Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowd v. Atlas Taxicab & Auto Service Co., 202 P. 870, 187 Cal. 523, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 386 (Cal. 1921).

Opinions

RICHARDS, J.,

pro tem. These two actions arose out of injuries received by the plaintiff in each through the overturning of a taxicab of the defendants while the plaintiffs were passengers therein. The accident occurred in the city of San Francisco at an early hour in the morning of January 1, 1919. The defendants were at the time co-partners, owning and operating through their employees certain taxicabs for hire within said city. The plaintiffs, with other members of their family and friends, the party numbering seven in all, entered one of these taxicabs driven by an employee of said defendants, and hired by one of the members of said party, other than said plaintiffs, for the purpose of conveying them from a point on 0 ’Farrell Street, near Powell, to their respective homes. The taxicab in question was an inclosed limousine, the seat of the driver being on the outside of its glass inclosure. After being driven for a considerable distance along and across the streets of said city,, the taxicab skidded upon a wet and slippery portion of Market Street at or near the point of its intersection with Grove Street and was overturned, and each of the plaintiffs was severely injured. They commenced these separate actions to recover damages by reason of their said injuries and each alleged in her complaint that said accident with resultant injuries occurred through the negligence of the employee of the defendant operating said taxicab, which consisted in his'having carelessly driven and operated the same at an unlawful and excessive rate of speed, by reason of which, without fault on the part of the plaintiffs, the taxicab turned over and the plaintiffs were thereby seriously injured. The defendants, in their answer in each case, denied the alleged or any acts of negligence on the part of their said employee, and by way of affirmative defense alleged that the said accident and plaintiffs’ consequent injuries were the result of contributory negligence of each of the plaintiffs in said actions. The causes were, by agreement of the parties, tried together *525 before the court sitting with a jury, which in each case returned a verdict in favor of the defendants. Motions ■for new trial were made and denied in each case and appeals taken from the judgments respectively rendered and entered therein, said appeals having, by agreement, been presented together upon identical records and briefs.

[1, 2] The first and main contention of the appellant in each of said cases is that the trial court committed prejudicial error in giving to the jury the following two instructions :

“If you find in this case that the automobile in which plaintiff was riding was driven at a rate of speed prohibited by law, and that plaintiff knew of the fact, but nevertheless voluntarily continued to ride in the automobile (and that she had opportunity to leave the machine and did not do so), and if you further find that the accident was proximately caused or contributed to by reason of the speed that the automobile was driven, then I instruct you that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages and your verdict must be in favor of defendant.

“If you find the automobile in which plaintiff was riding prior to the happening of the accident was being driven at an unlawful rate of speed, and if you further find that plaintiff knew that fact in time to have objected and to have left the automobile, or to have the speed decreased to a lawful rate prior to the happening of the accident,, and you further find that plaintiff made no objection and made no effort to be permitted to leave the automobile, and if you further find that the accident was proximately caused or contributed to by such unlawful rate of speed, then I instruct you that plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action and your verdict must be in favor of the defendant. ’ ’

It must be conceded that the foregoing instructions, if erroneous, constituted prejudicial error for which a reversal of each of these judgments would be ordered. They are each predicated upon the premise that the defendants’ employee was driving said taxicab at an unlawful rate of speed during much of the way from the point where the plaintiffs became his passengers to the place where the accident occurred and at the very time of its occurrence. The practically undisputed evidence in each of these cases shows this to have been the fact. The plaintiffs, therefore, *526 would have been entitled to recover damages for their injuries suffered in said accident unless they were each found by the jury to have been guilty of contributory negligence. The trial court charged the jury in the first of these instructions in substance that if the plaintiff in each case knew the fact that the automobile in which said plaintiff was riding was being driven at a rate of speed prohibited by law, but nevertheless continued voluntarily to ride therein, having the opportunity to leave the machine, but not doing so, she would not be entitled to recover damages and their verdict must be for the defendants. In the second of said instructions the court charged the jury in substance that if the plaintiff knew, prior to the happening of the accident, that the automobile in which she was riding was being driven at an unlawful rate of speed and knew that fact in time to have objected and to have left the automobile or to have the speed thereof decreased to a lawful rate prior to the happening of the accident, but made no objection and made no effort to be permitted to leave the automobile, she would not be entitled to recover damages and their verdict must be for the defendants. Each of said instructions, in our opinion, constitutes an erroneous statement of the law. These plaintiffs were each passengers for hire in the taxicab owned by the defendants and driven under their directions by their employee, who was in control of the operation, route, and speed of said vehicle, subject only to the general direction of the plaintiffs as to their respective destinations. It was the primary duty of the defendants herein to furnish a competent driver of the taxicabs they were furnishing to passengers for hire, and it was the primary duty of such driver to exercise, with respect to the safety of said passengers, the highest degree of care. There is no evidence herein other than that deducible from the fact immediately preceding and attending f.bis accident that the driver was incompetent or that he was not at all times up to the moment of such accident in full control of the machine, nor are the instructions criticised herein predicated upon any such assumption.

In the case of Little v. Hackett, 116 U. S. 366, [29 L. Ed. 652, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 391, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes], Mr. Justice Field, after an exhaustive review of the cases upon the subject up to the time of his decision, states what *527 would seem to be the reasonable rule respecting the duty and responsibility of passengers for hire in public conveyances.

“There is no distinction in principle whether the passengers be on a public conveyance like a railroad train or an omnibus, or be on a hack hired from a public stand in the street for a drive.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 870, 187 Cal. 523, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowd-v-atlas-taxicab-auto-service-co-cal-1921.