Greeneich v. Knoll

238 P. 163, 73 Cal. App. 1, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2861.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 238 P. 163 (Greeneich v. Knoll) 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
Greeneich v. Knoll, 238 P. 163, 73 Cal. App. 1, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 310 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PINCH, P. J.

Plaintiff, a widow, sued to recover damages for the death of her minor son, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. She was given judgment and the defendant has appealed.

Respondent objects to the consideration of the evidence on the ground that appellant’s request for a- transcript thereof was not filed in time. To uphold the contention would be to affirm the judgment, no error appearing upon the face of the judgment-roll. A decision of the question, however, is unnecessary, as the judgment must be affirmed on the merits.

Plaintiff’s son was of the age of thirteen years and eleven months and was in the eighth grade of the elementary schools. He was in charge of a newspaper route and during the evening of December 9, 1922, he was engaged in delivering papers to residents along Cherokee Lane, a paved highway running in a southerly direction from the town of Lodi. He was riding a bicycle without a light or reflex mirror, the light which he had been accustomed to use being then in a repair-shop. The evening was rainy and the pavement was wet and slippery.

Shortly before 6 o’clock of the same evening the defendant’s son, of the age of twenty years, was driving one of defendant’s trucks in a northerly direction along Cherokee Lane. The truck, which was of two and a half tons carrying capacity, was loaded with about 130 empty grape boxes, the weight of the truck and boxes being 7,000 pounds. It was equipped with presto headlights and kerosene dash-lights. The gas supply of the headlights became exhausted during the trip and only the dashlights were burning at the time of the accident. The driver of the truck and a boy of the age of eleven years were seated in the cab, which was entirely inclosed, except that the windshield was open to give a better view of the road ahead. An automobile was following the truck at a distance estimated by the witnesses to be from 50 to 100 feet therefrom. Another automobile was traveling south along the same road. When these two automobiles were about opposite each other a loud crash was heard and two of the empty boxes fell off the truck. The *4 truck continued along the road to the north, but the two au-' tomobiles at once came to a stop. The body of plaintiff’s son was found lying on the east half of the pavement, the skull and face so crushed as to cause instant death, several teeth lying on the pavement, and blood flowing from the crushed head. The broken bicycle, which evidently the boy had been riding, was lying near the body. “The body was lying just a trifle further north than the bicycle and the' boxes were on further than that, about . . . three or four feet.” A witness who was sitting in his house 237 feet dis-, tant from the scene of the accident, with the doors and windows closed, testified that he heard the crash, that “it was" a quick crash.” None of the occupants of the two automobiles saw the boy prior to the accident. Defendant’s son and the boy with him testified that they did not see the boy or his bicycle at any time. The driver of the automobile which had been going south followed and passed the truck after the accident, alighted from his machine and signaled the driver of the truck to stop, but the latter continued to go north. The driver of the machine again followed and passed the truck and succeeded in halting it near the edge of the town of Lodi. He testified that he asked defendant’s son “if he realized ... he had run over a boy and killed him”; that defendant’s son replied, “No, if anybody run over a boy and killed him, you did. . . . Ask the little boy if we run over anybody”; and that the little boy said, “No, we didn’t run over anybody.” 0. R. Fisher, a deputy sheriff and traffic officer of San Joaquin County, testified that he tested the dashlights on the truck two days after the accident; that at the time the test was made it was a very dark night and not raining; that the lights were so dim that, sitting in the driver’s seat, with the windshield open, he could not see a man standing in front of the machine at a greater distance than about ten feet. The defendant’s son testified that at the time the test was made the lights were in the same condition as they were at the time of the accident. The driver of the automobile which was following the truck immediately before the accident testified that he had been traveling between twenty and twenty-five miles an hour, that when he saw the truck he slowed down to between sixteen and twenty miles an hour and that *5 the truck “got ahead of me, that is, further than it was.” He also testified that his lights were good, that they showed “the truck up plainly,” that he saw the sides of the truck and underneath it and that he did not “see any object along the side of the truck or underneath it or anywhere around it.” The driver of the truck, the defendant’s son, testified that he could see the road clearly for forty or fifty feet ahead of the truck, that he watched the road ‘ all the time, ’ ’ that he did not see a boy “on a bicycle or otherwise,” that he was not traveling over fifteen miles an hour, and that the truck did not run over anything. A witness for the defendant testified that the speed limit of the truck is eighteen and a half miles an hour.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the implied finding of the jury that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s son, that if the “boy was killed by the motor-truck of defendant at all there were only two possible ways in which it could have been done. One is on the theory that he was towing at the side of the truck, and his bicycle slipped on the wet and slippery pavement and threw him under the truck, and the right hand wheel ran over his head. . . . The other would be on the theory that the Greeneich boy, just before the accident, was riding in front of the truck.” In support of the verdict it must be presumed that the jury found that the boy was not towing at the side of the machine. The driver of the automobile which was following the truck testified that his lights showed “the truck up plainly,” that he saw the sides of the truck but did not see “any object along the side of the truck . . . or any where around it.” Adopting the only other theory suggested by appellant, the negligence of the driver of the truck is clearly proved. It was within the province of the jury to accept the evidence which was most favorable to the plaintiff. From such evidence it appears that the heavy truck was being driven at a high rate of speed, over a slippery road, on a dark and rainy night, with front lights so dim that they would not reveal objects more than ten feet ahead. If such were the facts, then the driver of the truck was grossly negligent. If it be inferred, contrary to the evidence, that the motor-truck was “so governed or

*6 mechanically constructed or controlled that it cannot exceed a speed of fifteen miles per hour,” the Vehicle Act in force at the time of the accident required the truck to “carry at the front at least two lighted lamps which . . . shall be sufficient to reveal any person, vehicle or substantial object on the road straight ahead for a distance of seventy-five feet or over.” (Stats. 1919, p. 207.) The violation of the statute was negligence per se. It cannot be successfully maintained that such negligence was not a proximate cause of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 163, 73 Cal. App. 1, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greeneich-v-knoll-calctapp-1925.