Gerace v. Key System Transit Lines

304 P.2d 88, 146 Cal. App. 2d 667, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1956
DocketCiv. 16875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 304 P.2d 88 (Gerace v. Key System Transit Lines) 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
Gerace v. Key System Transit Lines, 304 P.2d 88, 146 Cal. App. 2d 667, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DOOLING, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs Joseph Gerace, a minor, by and through his guardian ad litem, Tally Gerace, and Tally Gerace in a personal injury action. The minor plaintiff recovered the sum of $250 while plaintiff Tally Gerace recovered the sum of $5,000. . Defendants are. Key *669 System Transit.Lines, a corporation (hereinafter called Key System), and one C. P. Peterson, an employee of Key System.

Respondents’ injuries arose out of an interurban electric train-automobile accident which occurred on December 9, 1953, at about 5 p. m. At the time of the accident respondents were passengers in an automobile driven by Alfred Gerace, husband and father respectively of respondents Tally and Joseph Gerace. The automobile in which respondents were riding .was struck from the rear by a train of appellant Key System operated by appellant Peterson.

The accident occurred on Twelfth Street between Broadway and Washington Street very close to the intersection of Washington and Twelfth Street in downtown Oakland. At the time of the accident both the train and the car in which respondents were riding were proceeding in a westerly direction on Twelfth Street. Alfred Gerace testified that he had driven south on Broadway until he came to Twelfth Street. At the intersection of Broadway and Twelfth Street he turned right and went west along Twelfth Street. He was then alongside of the train and he noticed that the train’s doors had just closed and that it was starting forward. He was traveling at a speed of about 10 to 15 miles per hour. He intended to make a left turn at the next intersection, Washington and Twelfth Street. He looked behind in his rear view mirror and saw appellants’ train about 150 feet behind him. He then looked ahead and saw that the traffic signal at the intersection he was approaching was green for traffic on Twelfth Street. After hand-signaling his intention to do so, Mr. Gerace then entered the extreme left lane preparatory to making his intended left turn. At this time he estimated that he was about 100 feet east of the Washington and Twelfth Street intersection. When he was about 50 feet from the intersection the traffic signal turned amber for Twelfth Street traffic. He then brought his automobile to a stop just east of the pedestrian crosswalk. He noted that a police officer located in the intersection was signaling for someone to go through the intersection but at that time there were pedestrians in the crosswalk. Mr. Gerace next heard the sound of a horn and felt an impact from the rear which shoved his automobile into the middle of the intersection.

The only warning from the train heard by Alfred Gerace was almost, instantaneous with the impact and respondent Tally Gerace did not hear a signal until the time of the accident.

*670 James McPartland, the police officer on duty at the Washington and Twelfth Street intersection testified that he saw the accident happen. At the time of the accident the automobile in which respondents were riding was stopped in the automobile lane nearest to the center of the street. When he first observed the train it was about 51 feet behind the Gerace automobile. Traffic control signals were in operation at the intersection where the accident occurred. Those signals applied to both trains and automobiles traveling on the roadway. When the officer realized that an accident was imminent he held back the traffic on Washington Street and directed the driver of the Gerace automobile to come ahead. He did not know if the automobile had started to move before the impact occurred.

Officer McPartland further testified that he had observed the Key System’s trains on many occasions. He had also observed them when they applied their brakes and had heard the sounds of braking of the train. In this case he did not hear any sounds of braking before the accident and he did not see the train slacken its speed in any appreciable amount before the accident. He was familiar with what happens when a train goes into “heavy braking”— when gravel is thrown onto the rails and the brakes are applied. Neither before the accident nor at the time of the impact did he note that such a procedure for stopping the train was utilized. He did not hear any bell or whistle given by the train before the impact.

The above recital of testimony given makes it obvious that the evidence is ample to support the verdict. Taking the evidence most favorable to respondents and disregarding conflicts, when the slowly moving train was 150 feet behind him the driver of the automobile moved on to the track in front of the train intending to make a left turn at the next intersection. At that time the signal light was in his favor. When he saw the light turn to amber he slowed his automobile and brought it to a stop at the intersection. The signal light was then red. Without any warning, until almost the moment of impact, the train struck his automobile in the rear and drove it into the intersection. Although the train had no mechanical difficulty the emergency brakes were at no time applied.

The driver of the automobile cannot be said to have been guilty of negligence as a matter of law in turning onto the track 150 feet ahead of a slowly moving train to make a left *671 turn at the next intersection. The driver of an automobile is not negligent as a matter of law in driving on that part of a street occupied by the tracks of a street railway and whether or not it was negligence under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence for the driver to turn onto the track 150 feet in front of the slowly moving train was for the jury to decide. (Berguin v. Pacific Elec. Ry. Co., 203 Cal. 116 [263 P. 220]; Arens v. United Railroads, 25 Cal.App. 714 [145 P. 163].) The appellants’ negligence might be found by the jury in the failure to keep the train under such control as to stop it before striking the automobile in plain view in front of it, in .the failure to sound any warning and in the failure to apply the emergency brakes. Indeed it is not clear from the briefs whether appellants’ present counsel are arguing the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. The argument on these points in the opening brief was based on a misconception of the evidence. The closing brief was filed by different counsel, substituted after the opening brief was filed, and the closing brief after acknowledging the misstatements of fact in the opening brief makes no further point of the sufficiency of the evidence.

Complaint is made of several instructions. The first instruction singled out informed the jury that the fact that appellants’ tracks occupied a portion of Twelfth Street did not give the defendant corporation an exclusive right to travel over that portion of the street and concluded: “Plaintiffs were entitled as a matter of right to use the street subject only to the limitation that they were obliged to use that degree of care ... as would a reasonably prudent person similarly situated.” The court also instructed that “inasmuch as the movement of the train is restricted by its tracks . . . the operators of other vehicles are required to yield the right of way” over such tracks. These two instructions, taken together were at least as favorable to appellants as the law justifies.

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Bluebook (online)
304 P.2d 88, 146 Cal. App. 2d 667, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerace-v-key-system-transit-lines-calctapp-1956.