Foshee v. Wolters

195 P.2d 930, 86 Cal. App. 2d 766
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1948
DocketCiv. 3686
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 930 (Foshee v. Wolters) 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
Foshee v. Wolters, 195 P.2d 930, 86 Cal. App. 2d 766 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

The three cases involved in this appeal were consolidated for trial and appeal, and grew out of an automobile collision which happened at about 6 o ’clock p. m. on May 17, 1946, on U. S. Highway No. 80 about 6 miles east of Holt-ville in Imperial County.

Judgment went against plaintiffs and appellants, Kenneth and Virginia Foshee. Plaintiffs and respondents William G. Cloes and Arthur F. Wollgast were given judgment against John Kenneth Foshee; William G. Cloes in the sum of $6,- *768 002.81, and Arthur F. Wollgast in the sum of $2,007.21. The plaintiffs and respondents Wesley J. Wolters and Iona S. Wolters were given judgment against Jack Rudy and John Kenneth Foshee in the sum of $17,196.31. The actions against ‘California & Arizona Produce Company, a corporation, and all defendants sued under fictitious names, other than Jack Rudy, were dismissed. Kenneth Foshee, John K. Foshee, and John Kenneth Foshee are names used by the same person.

An appeal was taken by plaintiffs and appellants and by all defendants and appellants, but only one brief has been filed and is on behalf of John Kenneth Foshee. The other appellants have made no appearance either by brief or oral argument. For brevity, except when otherwise necessary, we will hereafter refer to John Kenneth Foshee as the defendant, to the respondents as the plaintiffs, and to U. S. Highway No. 80 as the highway.

At the place of the accident the highway runs in a general easterly and westerly direction and is straight with an unobstructed view for about a mile. It is a concrete roadway about 20 feet wide with a white line in its center. On the southerly side is a Afoot oiled shoulder, a 5-foot gravel shoulder and a borrow pit abont 5 feet deep. On the northerly side is a 3-foot oiled shoulder, a Afoot graveled shoulder and a like borrow pit. The plaintiffs and two other persons who were riding in the car, all of whom testified at the trial, were traveling easterly on the highway in a Buick sedan owned and operated by Wesley Wolters. Defendant was driving his Plymouth sedan westerly at the same time.

The testimony of the occupants of the Wolters car may be very generally summarized as follows: That Wolters was driving his car easterly on his right hand half of the pavement at a speed of not more than 45 miles per hour; that when defendant’s car was around 200 of 300 feet from them it swerved onto the southerly half of the pavement; that as the two cars approached each other, and to avoid a head-on collision, Wolters swerved his ear northerly to his left so that part of it, at least the left wheels, were northerly of the center line; that at the same time defendant swerved his car northerly to his right and into the Wolters car causing both vehicles - to skid to the southerly side of the highway. The principal damage was on the right sides of the two cars.

The story of the defendant was in sharp conflict with the foregoing. He maintained that at all times his car was on its *769 right hand half of the road; that at the time of the collision its right wheels were off the pavement and into the weeds on the northerly side; that Wolters drove onto the northerly half of the highway in front of him; that the impact occurred near the northerly edge of the pavement and on Foshee’s half of the highway.

Two members of the California Highway Patrol reached the scene shortly after the accident. . They found a large spot of oil and water about 2 feet southerly from the northerly edge of the pavement and glass scattered over that part of the cement. Both cars were on the southerly part of the highway with the Wolters car 36 feet southeast of the spot and the Foshee car 39 feet southwest of it. Sixty-two feet separated the cars after they came to rest. Tire marks led from the oil and water spot to the wheels of the two cars.

All of the complaints alleged negligence in general terms and the trial judge found in general terms that Foshee was negligent; that his negligence was the proximte cause of the injuries to plaintiffs; that plaintiffs were not eontributorily negligent.

Defendant’s chief ground for a reversal of the judgment is based on an oral summary of the evidence by the trial judge at the close of the trial, and his opinion on how the accident happened, as disclosed in this summary. Defendant argues that the trial judge refused to accept either the Wolters or the Foshee version of how the accident happened but reached into thin air and concocted a version of his own which is not only unsupported by, but is contrary to all of the evidence in the case. From this he argues that the opinion shows the erroneous process of reasoning used by the trial judge in reaching his conclusions, which, being unsupported by any evidence, furnishes sufficient grounds for a reversal of the judgment, citing, Union Sugar Co. v. Hollister Estate Co., 3 Cal.2d 740 [47 P.2d 273], and Noble v. Kertz & Sons Feed Co., 72 Cal.App.2d 153 [164 P.2d 257].

This argument lacks convincing force when considered in the light of all the evidence in the case both oral and documentary and the summary as given by the judge.

It is clear that the trial judge accepted as true the evidence offered by plaintiffs to the effect that the Wolters car was proceeding easterly on its own proper side of the highway when the Foshee car swerved from its proper position onto the southerly half of the roadway and that the two automo *770 biles were thus approaching each other on this southerly half which was 10 feet in width. He also accepted as true, evidence that both cars were turned northerly and that the impact occurred where the oil and water spot appeared on the pavement which he described as within about 1 foot from the northerly edge of the concrete.

It thus appears that the chief difference between the evidence of plaintiffs and the summary of the trial judge was as to the exact point of the impact. The witnesses for plaintiffs, or some of them, admitted that the left wheels of their car might have been as much as 2 feet northerly from the center line, while the judge placed the point of impact at the oil and water circle, the northerly side of which he said was about 1 foot south of the northerly edge of the cement. Witnesses described the circle as about 4 feet in diameter. Thus, if we assume that the estimates of plaintiffs were exact and that the left wheels were exactly 2 feet north of the center line, which would be a violent assumption under the circumstances, there would remain only 3 feet of pavement between those wheels and the southerly edge of the circle assuming again that the other estimates were exactly correct. It is common knowledge that automobiles have an overhang extending beyond the wheels. It is also common knowledge that in a violent collision a car may be driven some distance in the opposite direction from which the impact comes. Therefore the inference may be drawn from the evidence in this ease that there is little important difference in the plaintiff’s evidence as to the point of impact and the summary of the trial judge on the same question.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 930, 86 Cal. App. 2d 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foshee-v-wolters-calctapp-1948.