Hoppe v. Bradshaw

108 P.2d 947, 42 Cal. App. 2d 334, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1260
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1941
DocketCiv. 2481
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 947 (Hoppe v. Bradshaw) 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
Hoppe v. Bradshaw, 108 P.2d 947, 42 Cal. App. 2d 334, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1260 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiff and appellant George H. Hoppe, while walking across a public highway, was struck by an *336 automobile belonging to defendant and respondent Southern California Edison Co., Ltd., and then being driven by defendant and respondent Charles B. Bradshaw.

This action was instituted to recover damages because of injuries thus received. The court directed a verdict in favor of defendants. From the judgment upon such directed verdict the plaintiff has taken this appeal.

The collision occurred at about 10:30 A. M. on October 3d, 1938, on California Boulevard, a paved highway about eighteen or twenty feet in width, extending east from the city of Ontario. On the north side of California Boulevard, at this point, the land is unimproved. On the south side is the property of the Cucamonga Co-Operative Winery, which is enclosed by a wire fence. The fence along the north side of the winery property is parallel to and about seven feet south of the south edge of the pavement on California Boulevard. The fence above described has four truck gates and one pedestrian gate, by means of which vehicles and pedestrians on the boulevard gained access to the winery.

At the time of the accident there were located on the south side of California Boulevard between the south edge of the pavement and the fence enclosing the winery property six or seven parked automobiles which were parked parallel with the highway and about one foot apart. The left front fenders on some of these parked automobiles extended over the south edge of the pavement from six to eight inches. Between the buildings on the winery property which were immediately south of the fence and the parked automobiles was a row of eucalyptus trees. The pedestrian gate above described, leading from the buildings to the highway, was located about nine feet to the rear of the most westerly car in the row of cars above described. There were no marked or unmarked cross-walks on the highway.

On the day in question, the appellant had driven his truck loaded with grapes into the winery, and after unloading it had driven out through one of the gates and according to one witness stopped on the north shoulder of the highway, off the pavement a few inches, at a point opposite the pedestrian gate. He then walked from his truck south across the boulevard and into the winery building. Aftér some first aid had been administered to him because of a slight cut on the head, he left the building and walked north "across a platform leading to the pedestrian gate for the purpose of returning *337 to Ms truck on the north side of the boulevard. This platform was at least twenty feet square and was elevated above the surface of the ground about one and one-half or two feet. From this platform the exhibits and other evidence indicate that appellant could have observed an oncoming automobile over the tops of the parked cars, just before he stepped to the ground at the entrance to the gate. The record is silent as to whether he made any observation from this point. As appellant was starting across the boulevard from behind the parked cars the automobile operated by Bradshaw, which was traveling westerly, collided with him and knocked him to the pavement. As a result the appellant sustained a compound comminuted fracture of one leg, a fracture of the skull and a brain injury. The brain injury resulted in a loss of memory to such an extent that he had no recollection of any of the incidents from the time he crossed the winery building platform until he regained consciousness in the hospital six days later.

The motion for a directed verdict was based upon the asserted absence of negligence on the part of defendants and respondents and the asserted contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff and appellant.

As to respondent Bradshaw’s negligence the record discloses, from the evidence of one of the witnesses produced by appellant, that certain skid marks of respondents’ automobile started about twelve feet east of the pedestrian gate and continued westerly for seventy-five feet and that these marks were “straddle of the center of the road . . . right straddle of the middle of the road”.

Another witness testified that the appellant was lying on the south edge of the pavement with his feet “close to the edge or on the dirt”; that the skid marks were “practically about in the middle of the road” and about seventy or seventy-five feet long; that these marks began fifteen or sixteen feet east of the pedestrian gate; and that the left front fender of the respondents’ automobile was damaged; that the distance between appellant’s parked truck and the south edge of the pavement was approximately fifteen feet.

Appellant contends that this evidence conclusively shows that the respondent Bradshaw was traveling on the wrong side of the highway at the time of the accident, citing section 525 of the Vehicle Code.

*338 In reference to the speed of respondent’s automobile one'of the appellant’s witnesses testified that he was walking westerly along the inside of the north fence at a point two hundred feet east of the pedestrian gate when the respondents’ automobile went past traveling “45 miles an hour at least”.

Appellant contends that a lower rate of speed was imperative under section 510 of the Vehicle Code for the reason that the roadway was narrow; that the pavement at the point of the accident was not over eighteen or nineteen feet wide; that the south edge of the pavement was filled with a string of automobiles extending east from the pedestrian gate, leaving only a traveled surface of eighteen feet between this row of automobiles and the north edge of the pavement; that on the north shoulder there were three or more parked automobiles; that the appellant’s truck was also parked on the north edge of that same pavement; that the highway was being used extensively due to the fact that it was the busy season at the winery and that this fact was obvious from the activities in and about the premises, the coming and going of trucks with grapes, and other commodities incident to operation, and the presence of many parked vehicles of workmen and patrons on both sides of the street, all of which was known to the respondent Bradshaw, who traveled over this portion of the boulevard bi-weekly for five years and had driven past the winery earlier that same day; that the visibility was poor; that the view of the pedestrian gate and the scale gate, from which the approach of others onto the highway should be anticipated, was obstructed to motorists coming from the east by the row of parked automobiles on the south shoulder,' and by the fence; that respondent Bradshaw admitted that he did not blow his horn because “it was split second between the time I saw him and the time I hit him”; that there was no reason why Bradshaw could not have blown his horn before he saw the appellant and that under section 671b of the Vehicle Code it was his duty so to do; and that he failed to keep a lookout and anticipate the presence of others on the highway.

The record discloses from the testimony of one of appellant’s witnesses that he had a conversation with the respondent Bradshaw immediately after the accident and that Bradshaw told him that he (Bradshaw) “didn’t see him (Hoppe) until he was right on him”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 947, 42 Cal. App. 2d 334, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoppe-v-bradshaw-calctapp-1941.