Houser v. Bozwell

182 P.2d 314, 80 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1010
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1947
DocketCiv. 15529
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 314 (Houser v. Bozwell) 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
Houser v. Bozwell, 182 P.2d 314, 80 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1010 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of defendant pursuant to a verdict of the jury in an action to recover damages on account of alleged injuries sustained by the minor plaintiff when she was struck by the automobile of defendant.

It is here contended: “(A) That respondent's attorney committed a reversible error when, in his argument to the jury he made statements concerning an unidentified person who may have been a witness to the accident which were wrongful, wholly unjustified and unsupported by the evidence and amounted to a charge that appellants were guilty of withholding and suppressing evidence, and (B) that the trial court gave erroneous instructions to the jury.”

This action arises out of a collision between a pedestrian and an automobile which occurred about 12:30 p. m. on January 27, 1945, on Van Owen Street between Lankershim Boulevard and Simpson Street in the city of Los Angeles. Van Owen Street, a two-lane highway, runs east and west, with no sidewalks on either side. At the time of the accident, the minor appellant was walking along the north shoulder of Van Owen Street in an easterly direction, and respondent was driving her automobile in a westerly direction along said street. As the automobile passed the pedestrian, she was struck by the automobile and sustained serious injuries.1

The facts as to the manner in which the accident occurred are in direct conflict. Appellants’ witnesses testified to the effect that respondent drove her automobile over onto the soft shoulder where the minor pedestrian was walking, and col *704 lided with her. Respondent testified that no part of her automobile was on the dirt shoulder after she crossed Lanker-shim Boulevard or at any time before the accident occurred; that she saw appellant Betty Houser and her girl companion walking abreast of each other on the shoulder about a foot and a half or two feet from the edge of the pavement; that as she approached the two girls “the one on the inside stepped forward a couple of steps and the one next to the pavement whirled around on the boulevard and looked down in the opposite direction in which I was going, in front of my car. ... I swerved the car to miss her, and after I swerved I heard a noise, a thump ... so then I stopped my car and got out and went back”; that when the girl made the movement described by the witness, her car “was about as far as from this to that” from her (indicating a space to the jury that was agreed to be about 5 feet in distance); that the girl got out onto the paved portion of the highway ‘1 a step or two. She just threw herself right in line with my ear and I was driving in the center of the lane”; that said witness succeeded in swerving her ear to the left far enough so that she thought she “had missed the girl”; that she did not actually see the impact.

Donald Cussmenn, an attendant at the service station at Lankershim and Van Owen Street, testified he was standing by the gas pumps washing his hands, a distance of 300 feet from the place where the impact occurred; and that when he first noticed the girls “they were on the north side of the road, ’' on the shoulder, and were walking close together; that at that time they were a little bit west of the point where the accident occurred and he saw them “a little bit” before he saw the ear stop at the stop sign; that when the ear stopped at the stop sign on Lankershim Boulevard, it was entirely upon the pavement; that from the time the car started from the place where it made the boulevard stop, it was gradually veering over to the right until it got off the pavement at the point indicated at C-4, and then it was about a foot off the pavement; that at the time of the impact the girl, who was injured, was about two or two and a half feet off the pavement; that at W-l (the point of impact), there was enough of the car on the dirt shoulder to hit the girl; that he did not know how fast the car was going at the time of the impact; that he could not estimate the speed in miles per hour; that after the impact the car continued on the dirt, but that he did not notice when it got back on the pavement again.

*705 In the state of the record, it became a question of fact for the determination of the jury as to whether respondent driver of the automobile was guilty of negligence proximately causing the collision, or whether appellants were contributively negligent.

It is here contended that because of the alleged prejudicial statements made by respondent’s attorney in his argument to the jury, appellants were deprived of a fair and impartial trial, in that the jury was influenced by such statements and did not decide the case upon its real merits.

The arguments of counsel to the jury are not contained in the reporter’s transcript. However, the affidavit made by appellants’ counsel in support of their motion for a new trial, which was based in part on the alleged misconduct of respondent’s attorney and which motion was denied, avers as follows:

“That in his argument to the jury Attorney McGee stated as follows:

“ ‘Where is Lucille Hodges? Why has the plaintiff not produced her as a witness? You will recall that she is the cousin of the plaintiff, Betty Houser, and that she was walking with her at the time the accident occurred. She was in a better position than anyone to know what happened, and it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to produce this witness, who was her own cousin.’

“That thereupon, Attorney Moore (counsel for appellants) objected on behalf of the plaintiffs to the aforesaid argument on the ground that it was entirely outside of the record, contrary to the evidence, inflammatory, and highly prejudicial, which objection was thereupon overruled by the Court, and that thereupon, Attorney McGee further stated to the jury as follows:

“ ‘Your Honor, Betty said Lucille was her cousin and the evidence certainly shows that someone was with her that day. All right, we won’t use the name Lucille Hodges then. The young lady who was with Betty, why hasn’t she been called or if she shouldn’t be in the jurisdiction, why hasn’t her deposition been placed before you because our law gives you the right to take the deposition of a party who isn’t where he or she can attend the trial. Now, obviously, we wouldn’t call that witness because she would of course be a prejudiced witness. I wouldn’t dare" call her to the stand or dare take *706 her deposition bnt they could. But here is the thing, after an accident people sometimes make statements as to how it happened. If I called the young lady who was with Betty and put her on the stand I couldn’t impeach her by showing what she told the police afterwards but if they called her to the stand then I could show the statement she made to the police. Now why hasn’t she been called in this case?’

“That Attorney Moore then made the following statement and objection:

“ ‘Your Honor, do I understand my objection goes to all this? There is nothing in the record showing any witness available. ’

“That thereupon the following statement was made by the court:

“ ‘There is nothing to show anything at all about it except that there was somebody there and that is perfectly proper comment. ’

“That thereupon, Attorney Moore then made the following objection:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 314, 80 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houser-v-bozwell-calctapp-1947.