Johnson v. Johnson

31 P.2d 237, 137 Cal. App. 701, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 922
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1934
DocketCiv. No. 1202
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 P.2d 237 (Johnson v. Johnson) 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
Johnson v. Johnson, 31 P.2d 237, 137 Cal. App. 701, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 922 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while riding in an automobile as the guest of his father, the defendant George I. Johnson, which injuries occurred as the result of a collision between that automobile and one driven by the defendant Eastlund. The collision occurred in the daytime of June 1, 1930, at the intersection of Mendocino Avenue and Dinuba Avenue, two country roads in Fresno County. Mendocino Avenue is a paved road running north and south and Dinuba Avenue, an oiled road, intersects it at right angles. On the occasion in question the Johnson car was proceeding north on Mendocino Avenue and the Eastlund car came from the west on Dinuba Avenue and- turned north on Mendocino. The collision occurred somewhere within this intersection and while the Eastlund car was making the turn .or just as it was completing the same. There were no eye-witnesses other than the occupants of the two cars and their testimony is hopelessly conflicting.

Testimony was given by the defendant Johnson and his witnesses to the effect that he was traveling through the intersection at about thirty miles an hour; that about fifty [703]*703feet south of the intersection his son called his attention to the Eastlund car; that he then saw this car some one hundred or two hundred feet west of the intersection; that' that car was then traveling between twenty-five and thirty miles an hour; that he entered the intersection first; that the collision occurred when the rear of his car was about the center of Dinuba Avenue; that the Eastlund car hit his car over the"left rear wheel; that after the collision liis car struck an electric power pole standing at the northeast corner of the intersection; that his right rear fender struck the pole and the car bounced north and to the west of the pole; and that the Eastlund car stopped about the middle of the paved portion of Mendocino Avenue, near the north line of the intersection and just to the west of where his car stopped. He also testified that he did not slacken his speed and that he had no occasion to do so as he had the right of way.

The defendant Eastlund’s version, sustained by other occupants of his car, was that as he approached the intersection he was traveling not more than fifteen miles an hour; that he reduced his speed and entered the intersection at not more than eight miles an hour; that he intended to turn north on Mendocino Avenue and signaled for a left-hand turn by holding his left hand straight out; that he saw the Johnson car when he was about twenty feet from the intersection; that at that time the Johnson car was about two hundred or three hundred feet south of the intersection and coming pretty fast, probably fifty miles an hour; that he did not cut the corner, but made a square turn, keeping on the pavement, however; that the collision occurred when he had about completed the turn and when his car was not quite straightened out parallel with the east edge of the pavement; that the Johnson car struck his car on the right-hand front fender just ahead of the right front door; that the left front wheel or bumper on the Johnson car struck his car; that the cars then bounced together, throwing the rear end of the cars together; that neither the front of his car nor any portion thereof near the front struck the left rear fender of the Johnson ear; that the front right wheel of his car was broken and the front fender and back fender on the right side of his car were damaged; and that at the time of the collision his automobile was on the [704]*704east edge of the pavement and the Johnson car was either entirely or partly off the pavement.

A disinterested witness who arrived on the scene shortly after the accident testified that the Johnson car was entirely on the dirt with its rear about two feet from the power pole; that the Bastlund ear was standing on the pavement just to the west of the other ear; that the right front wheel on the Bastlund car was broken and the right front fender damaged; that the right side of the Johnson car was damaged; and that the right rear wheel hub on the Johnson car had plowed a hole in the power pole an inch deep and about three inches wide.

At the time this accident occurred the law permitted a guest to recover on proof of gross negligence and this case was tried upon that theory. The jury rendered a verdict against both defendants and each defendant has appealed, the appeals being separately presented.

The appellant Johnson first contends that the evidence, as a matter of law, is not sufficient to support the implied finding of gross negligence on his part. . It is first contended that while the evidence given by the occupants of the Bastlund car was to the contrary, the physical facts conclusively prove that the Johnson car entered the intersection first and that the other car struck it on the fender just over the left rear wheel. As demonstrating this, this appellant relies upon a photograph of his car appearing in the record which shows its left rear fender dented or caved in just above that wheel. It is argued that this physical fact cannot be explained under the theory maintained by the occupants of the Bastlund car and conclusively shows that this appellant’s theory as to how the accident occurred is correct. The danger of relying exclusively upon the condition and position in which cars are left for an explanation as to how á collision occurred, and the many elements of uncertainty affecting such a situation, has been frequently pointed out (Fishman v. Silva, 116 Cal. App. 1 [2 Pac. (2d) 473] ; Johnston v. Peairs, 117 Cal. App. 208 [3 Pac. (2d) 617]; Holt v. Yellow Cab Co., 124 Cal. App. 385 [12 Pac. (2d) 472]). It may be also observed that this appellant’s theory of how the accident happened leaves unexplained a number of other physical facts. Por instance, the front end of the Bastlund car was not [705]*705damaged, the left front fender and light on the Johnson car were badly damaged, as shown by the photographs appearing in the record, and the bumper of the Johnson car was knocked off, although the evidence shows that neither the front nor the left side of that car struck the power pole. It would appear that the existing physical facts, that is the condition in which the cars were left, could be better explained under the theory advanced by Bastlund as to how the accident occurred than under this appellant’s version. It is easy to account for the damage appearing on the right front side of the Bastlund car and for the damage to the bumper and left front side of the Johnson ear, if the Bastlund car, as it was about to complete the turn, was struck just behind its right front wheel by the bumper and left front side of the Johnson car. And the force of the blow, with the fact that the Bastlund car was being steered to its left in making the turn, might then naturally result in the rear portion of the Bastlund car sliding to its right and making the dent which appears in the left rear fender of the Johnson ear. The force of the collision and the natural impulse of the driver to turn to the right would then account for the Johnson car swerving to the right and colliding with the power pole after the front end of the car had passed that object. Under the record here, it is not possible to hold that the physical facts relied upon by this appellant are sufficient to overcome the physical facts and the testimony which tend to have a contrary effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P.2d 237, 137 Cal. App. 701, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-calctapp-1934.