Ilardi v. Central California Traction Co.

172 P. 763, 36 Cal. App. 488, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 429
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 11, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1777.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 172 P. 763 (Ilardi v. Central California Traction 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
Ilardi v. Central California Traction Co., 172 P. 763, 36 Cal. App. 488, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 429 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.

The action was brought to recover from the defendant, Central California Traction Company, damages for its negligence in causing the death of Gandolfo Ilardi, the father of plaintiff, who, at the time of the commencement of the action, was about eleven years of age. The defendant, Rosa Ilardi, is the widow of the deceased and the stepmother of plaintiff. She was joined as a defendant, for the reason, as stated in the complaint, that she had refused to join as a party plaintiff. She made no appearance in the action and her default was duly entered, but she is not affected by the judgment, which was against the defendant, Central California Traction Company, for the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars. The appeal is by said company from the judgment.

Appellant owns and operates an inter urban electric railroad between the cities of Sacramento and Stockton, carrying passengers and freight between said cities and way stations. Running southerly from Sacramento, for a distance of more than half a mile, trains are operated over a single-track road on the east side of, and parallel with, a public highway known *490 as the Upper Stockton Road, which road is paved along its center with asphaltum, the paved portion being about eighteen feet in width, while on each side of the pavement the road has a dirt surface about ten feet in width. The railroad track is immediately along the east side of the dirt road east of the pavement. At a point outside the city limits of Sacramento, a street, known as Vina Vista Street, crosses said railroad track at a right angle and intersects with, but does not cross, said Upper Stockton Road. The view from Vina Vista Street for a distance of half a mile north or toward the city o^ Sacramento was unobstructed.

The evidence discloses that one Sansone and the deceased, who were brothers-in-law, resided on Vina Vista Avenue; that the deceased, who, at the time of his death, was thirty-four years of age, had been employed in the shops of the Southern Pacific Company, in the city of Sacramento; that some two months previously to the accident whereby he lost his life, he had met with an accident at the railroad-shops, a piece of steel having been imbedded in his left eye; that for some time before he was killed, he made daily trips to an oculist in the city of Sacramento for treatment, leaving his home in the early morning for that purpose and generally returning in the afternoon with said Sansone in the latter’s wagon, which was what is known as a “contractor’s wagon.”

The accident in which the deceased lost his life occurred on the seventeenth day of January, 1914, at about 4:30 o’clock P. M. Sansone had left his home in said wagon, drawn by a single horse, early in the morning and went to Sacramento City. The deceased had also gone to the city for treatment by the oculist. At about 1 o’clock on the afternoon of that day the deceased joined Sansone at Sixth and D Streets, in said city, and the two started together in the wagon for their homes on Vina Vista Avenue, the wagon being loaded with lumber. Sansone was the owner of the horse and wagon and Ilardi was riding with him merely as his guest, he having no interest in or control of or over the horse and wagon or the business for which Sansone used them. Sansone, who was driving, sat on the right hand and the deceased on the left-hand side of the seat. They were traveling south and on the west side of the Upper Stockton Road until reaching a point within a distance of about two city blocks from Vina Vista Street, when a horse and wagon driven by one Fletcher, *491 and proceeding from a driveway on the west side of the road or street, caused Sansone to pull over to the dirt road on the east side and some eight or ten feet from the appellant’s railroad track. After passing said horse and wagon, Sansone, so he testified, turned back to the west side of the road. Upon reaching Vina Vista Street, however, Sansone turned to the left and started to cross the railroad track, and at this instant of time an interurban train of two cars, traveling south from Sacramento, struck the wagon, throwing it, the horse, and the occupants of the wagon a considerable distance from the crossing. As a result of the collision Ilardi was almost instantly killed.

The evidence further shows that the day upon which the accident occurred was cloudy, that it had been raining during most of the day, and that a heavy southeast wind was prevailing at the time of the accident. Sansone testified that when he reached a point about twenty-five feet from the Vina Vista crossing, he stopped the horse and looked to the north and the south; that he saw or heard no train coming from either direction, and then proceeded on toward the crossing; that, when at a distance of five feet from the crossing, he again halted the horse and again looked in both directions to see if there was a train approaching and also listened for the noise or some signal of one, but that he neither saw nor heard one, and so started across the track, with the result as above described.

A number of witnesses testified that the train, just before it struck the wagon, was traveling at from thirty to forty miles an hour, and certain witnesses testified that they heard no whistle or other signal proceed from the train, while there were others who said that, a few seconds before the collision, they heard a loud, long whistle, followed in close succession by two short, shrill whistles. And, while some of the witnesses testified that they could see up and down the track at the time of the accident a distance of five or six blocks, Sansone testified that, on account of the darkness of the day, due to the cloudy skies and the lateness of the hour, he could see no greater distance, either up or down the track, than 250 feet. He further testified that the deceased did not at any time, before they turned and started to cross the track, say anything or look either up or down the track. He was merely “sitting there,” said the witness. The testimony fur *492 ther showed that Ilardi, before he received the injury to his eye, had for a long time almost daily gone to his place of employment and returned to his home on Vina Vista Street on the cars of the appellant, and was, of course, familiar with the existence of the railroad track at said street.

The motorman testified that the train, at the time of the accident, was traveling at the rate of from fifteen to eighteen miles an hour. He further testified that he possibly could have stopped the train within a distance of 150 feet. He admitted that the last crossing signal he sounded before the collision was at a point between Hartley and Vine Streets, and just after leaving the former street, which is north of Vine, and that he did not blow the whistle for the Vina Vista Street crossing until he saw the horse and wagon in the act of crossing the track at said street. The motorman, according to his testimony, first observed the wagon in which Sansone and the deceased were riding before he reached Vine Street. He said that he noticed the vehicle particularly because it was traveling on the ,wrong side of the road; that he kept his eyes on the wagon, thinking possibly that it might be turned to pass over one of the street crossings; that when he was near Vine Street, the wagon was very near Vina Vista Street. 'The horse was traveling at a very slow rate of speed—not over two or three miles an hour, according to his best judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 763, 36 Cal. App. 488, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ilardi-v-central-california-traction-co-calctapp-1918.