Girdner v. Union Oil Co.

13 P.2d 915, 216 Cal. 197, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 550
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1932
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4686.
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 915 (Girdner v. Union Oil 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
Girdner v. Union Oil Co., 13 P.2d 915, 216 Cal. 197, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 550 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

TYLER, J., pro tem.

Appeal from a judgment awarding plaintiff $5,000 for personal injuries and $500 damages to his' automobile, as the result of a collision between plaintiff’s automobile and an oil truck owned by defendant Union Oil Company, and driven by defendant Elam. The case was tried by the court sitting without a jury.

The sole question presented by the appeal is whether or not the facts in the case justify a recovery for plaintiff under the last clear chance doctrine. Appellant claims that *199 the evidence is insufficient to support the findings and judgment. Primarily it may be stated that whether the doctrine is applicable in a given case depends entirely upon the existence or nonexistence of the elements necessary to bring it into operation, and this question is controlled by factual circumstances. Here there is evidence to show that the collision between the automobile driven by plaintiff and the truck belonging to defendant oil company and driven by defendant Elam, occurred at the intersection of Ferry Street and the California state highway, in the town of Anderson, in Shasta County, on the sixth day of January, 3927, between 2 and 3 o’clock in the afternoon. Ferry Street in the town of Anderson runs in an easterly and westerly direction, while the highway runs through said town in a northerly and southerly direction. The Southern Pacific Railroad lies east of and runs parallel with the highway. At the time of the collision, plaintiff was driving a touring car with side curtains. He was proceeding in a westerly direction on Ferry Street across the highway. As he passed over the railroad track he was, due to the condition of the road, driving slowly at about four or five miles an hour. After crossing the railroad track he accelerated his speed to twelve or fifteen miles an hour. Plaintiff testified that he looked to the north when twenty or thirty feet from the east side of the track and saw no cars approaching. He then looked south down the highway. He did not again look to the north but drove on to the highway, still looking to the south when the collision occurred. He further testified that he never saw the truck of defendant that day, either before or after the occurrence of the accident.

At the time of the collision and immediately prior thereto the truck was being operated by defendant Elam along the highway in a southerly direction. According to his testimony, Elam saw the plaintiff when he was about fifty feet north of the intersection. He testified that Girdner was traveling about fifteen miles an hour and that at no time during the period in which he observed him did Girdner look in Ms direction; that he (Elam) took his foot off the gas accelerator and let the truck drift toward the intersection ; that during the period of time his truck was so drifting the speed thereof was retarded about three miles an *200 hour, so that he was traveling about twelve miles an hour; and that when he got about fifteen feet from the point of collision he applied his brakes and turned his truck to the right when about four or five feet from the point of collision.

Other witnesses variously estimated the speed at which Elam was traveling at from fifteen to thirty miles an hour. The court found that he was proceeding at a rate of twenty miles. Elam admitted he did not sound his horn as he approached the intersection prior to the collision, nor did he give plaintiff any warning of his approach. The truck driven by Elam was eighteen feet in length and about five and a half feet in width, weighing at the time, with its load, about five tons. There was evidence to show that it could be stopped according to the following speeds: 10 miles per hour, 8 to 10 feet; 15 miles per .hour, 12 to 13 feet; 20 miles per hour, 20 feet; 25 miles per hour, 23 to 25 feet; 30 miles per hour, 34 or 35 feet.

By reason of the impact, plaintiff’s car was shoved or skidded along the pavement in a southerly direction for a distance of from fifteen to twenty feet. Skid marks on the pavement showed that the wheels of the truck skidded for a distance variously estimated at from fifteen to twenty feet. As a result of the collision plaintiff suffered severe and permanent injuries, and his automobile was completely demolished.

In rendering judgment for the plaintiff, the trial court based its decision upon the last clear chance doctrine, and filed an opinion in the case in which it discussed the evidence. It found, in substance, that plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care, and did not act as an ordinarily prudent person would have acted in the operation of his automobile when approaching an intersection, as he failed to look to the north, in wdiich event he would have seen the truck that confronted him. In failing to look, it held plaintiff to be guilty of contributory negligence, barring his right to a recovery unless the doctrine of the last clear chance applied to the facts. It then found that the evidence clearly established the fact that when plaintiff approached and was proceeding across the path of the oil truck, and up to the time of the collision, he did not see and was totally oblivious of the approach of the truck, and the danger that confronted him; that defendant Elam first *201 saw plaintiff’s car some forty or fifty feet away from the intersection; that he saw plaintiff looking straight ahead, in an opposite direction, and not slowing the speed of his automobile; that Elam was traveling at a speed of twenty miles an hour and could have stopped his truck almost immediately, and within a distance of a few feet; that he had ample time and sufficient distance, at least twenty-five to thirty-five feet, in which to stop and avoid coming in contact with plaintiff’s car, but failed to do so. Accordingly, it applied the doctrine of the last clear chance to the facts of the case.

It is claimed on behalf of appellants that the doctrine of last clear chance has no application to a situation as here, where by mutual carelessness an injury ensues to one of two parties. In other words, the doctrine of last clear chance excludes from the operation of its underlying principle every case wherein it may be said that the negligence of the injured party was contemporaneous, concurrent, continuing and contributory with the negligence of the party inflicting the injury, up to the very moment of the impact. Accordingly it is claimed that the trial court had a misconception of the doctrine of last clear chance. In support of their claim appellants cite us to the doctrine announced in such cases as Everett v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co., 115 Cal. 105 [34 L. R. A. 350, 46 Pac. 889], Lee v. Market Street Ry. Co., 135 Cal. 293 [67 Pac. 765], Young v. Southern Pac. Co., 182 Cal. 369 [190 Pac. 36], Rowe v. Southern California Ry. Co., 4 Cal. App. 1 [87 Pac. 220], where the continual negligence doctrine is announced. This doctrine is, like the doctrine of the last clear chance, based upon the particular facts of the case and is but a determination that the facts involved do not bring into operation the latter doctrine, but involve merely the ordinary and proximately contributory negligence which will bar recovery in any ease.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 915, 216 Cal. 197, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girdner-v-union-oil-co-cal-1932.