Griswold v. Pacific Electric Railway Co.

187 P. 65, 45 Cal. App. 81, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 317
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3121.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 P. 65 (Griswold v. Pacific Electric Railway Co.) 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
Griswold v. Pacific Electric Railway Co., 187 P. 65, 45 Cal. App. 81, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 317 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BRITTAIN, J.

The • plaintiff appeals from a nonsuit judgment in an action for the death of his wife, personal injuries to himself, and injuries to the automobile he was driving when it was struck by an electric train at a grade crossing in Los Angeles County. The nonsuit was granted solely on the ground of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence. Three questions of law only are presented. The first is as .to the technical sufficiency of the motion for' nonsuit. Its determination is in no sense involved with the facts of the ease. The second is as to the technical propriety of the defendant’s pleading. Its determination in no way depends on any facts in the case. The third is whether the evidence of what occurred immediately preceding and up to the very instant of the accident, stated most strongly for the plaintiff, was such that in view of the law applicable to such cases reasonable men could reach but one conclusion concerning the caution or lack of caution of the plaintiff in approaching the railroad track. The determination of this question in no way depends on the deplorable and most distressing results of the accident, and their consideration or *83 statement could serve only to create a bias above which the judge of the superior court with high regard for the judicial function rose.

[1] There are certain fundamental rules of law controlling upon the court. The element of sympathy for the suffering, mental or physical, of the plaintiff can be given no weight if he took chances which the law declares can only be taken upon the responsibility of those who take them and so bring themselves and others into peril. The fact that others take or have taken similar chances and have escaped injury cannot be given any greater weight than would the plea of one accused of wrongdoing that others had done the same thing without suffering the consequences of a disregard of those rules of law which exist for the safety and protection of all men, and which should be applied, regardless of apparent or real hardship in the particular cases to which they properly relate. The aphorism that justice should be tempered with mercy gives no warrant to courts to be unlawfully generous with the property of one litigant for the benefit of another. If the law is too hard, it should be changed, but it is not the function of courts to evade it either by disregarding the facts or misapplying established rules of law. In the particular case, if either the facts or the law were different, this court and no doubt the judge of the superior court would be glad if the judgment appealed from could be reversed, but this court is bound, as he was, by the facts, and the law as declared by the legislature and the supreme court of this state.

Stated most strongly for the appellant, and assuming for the present purpose only, that the defendant was in some degree negligent, the facts- essential for the determination of this appeal in accordance with the general principles of law which control the actions of this court are as follows: The defendant operates a railroad running from the city of Los Angeles to various places in its vicinity. Its cars and trains are operated by electric power, and, at the place where the accident occurred, over tracks laid upon a private right of way owned by the defendant. Near the scene of the accident, which was some miles outside of the municipal limits of Los Angeles, a more or less closely built-up, but apparently scattering, settlement had sprung up along both sides of the right of way and near to it. To accommodate *84 traffic from one side of the right of way to the other, crossings were maintained at the streets or roads through this semi-rural settlement, about the length of an ordinary city block apart—250 to 300 feet. Between these cross-streets, and fronting on the right of way, were a few shops, a sidewalk running in front of them, with the distance of seven feet or thereabouts between the outer edge of the sidewalks and the nearest rail of the defendant’s tracks. On the right of way there were four parallel tracks running north and south, the two outer tracks being used for local trains, and the two middle tracks for through trains, which were normally operated at a higher rate of speed than the local trains, and which made infrequent stops. Starting from the west side, from which the appellant .was driving, the four tracks are designated in order as “south-bound local,” “main line south,” “main line north,” and “north-bound local.” The space between the rails of each track was five feet; the distance between the two main tracks, nine and a half feet; between the main line and the local tracks, eight and a half feet. At the -right-hand side of the street on the nearest side of the right of way as the plaintiff approached was what is designated as a wigwag, or automatic flagman. It is an electrically controlled device which, when in operation, swings to and fro a warning signal to the continuous clangor of a gong. It is put in operation when an approaching train from the north on either of the first two tracks reaches a point one' thousand feet north of the crossing, and it continues ringing until the train has passed the crossing. It is similarl/ operated by trains from the south. If a train stops within the one thousand feet, the signal continues in operation while the train remains. Trains on one or another of the four tracks were passing every few minutes during the day and the crossing was a stopping place for local trains. The wigwag was, therefore, in operation a great part of each day; as one witness said, “three-fourths of the time.”

The plaintiff had lived in the vicinity since 1913 *and had ridden on the defendant’s trains. He was fifty years of age and had driven an automobile for about two years. He had crossed the tracks at this place once before. In the Ford machine with him were his wife, another lady, and a little girl. As he approached the crossing from the west *85 there were two other automobiles in front of him. The view to the north was obstructed by a building at the corner of the street and the west line of the railroad right of way. The view to the south was similarly obstructed by a lumberyard, in which there were buildings. The appellant’s machine was on the south side of the street, nearest the wigwag, which he testified he saw in operation. He saw a train going south on the main line, and a Watts local come north and stop on the south side of the crossing. In that position it would have operated the wigwag, and the plaintiff testified he thought it was the cause of the alarm.

The first two machines came up to the track and stopped there. The plaintiff stopped as the front wheels of his car reached the first track. He stopped just an instant and looked up and down the track both ways. His view to the south was obstructed by the train which had passed in that direction. The other two machines had passed bn. He started his machine in the low gear at about the rate of ten or twelve miles an hour. He could have stopped his machine, he testified, in five or six, or eight or ten, feet. From where he stopped to the first rail of the main track north, where the accident occurred, was twenty-eight feet. It was about 6 or 6:30 o’clock in the evening in August and was not dark. A whistle was sounded by some train, but he did not hear it.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 65, 45 Cal. App. 81, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griswold-v-pacific-electric-railway-co-calctapp-1919.