Jolley v. Clemens

82 P.2d 51, 28 Cal. App. 2d 55, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 1938
DocketCiv. 2057
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 82 P.2d 51 (Jolley v. Clemens) 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
Jolley v. Clemens, 82 P.2d 51, 28 Cal. App. 2d 55, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 487 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

HAINES, J., pro tem.

Between 1 and 2 o’clock in the morning of February 10, 1937, defendant and appellant, Wallace. Clemens, was driving an automobile at the rate of from 40 to 45 miles an hour in a northerly direction on his right side of what is known as Highway 101, which runs north and south between Tijuana, Mexico, and San Diego, California. In the region involved the highway is both itself level and straight and also at the approximate level of the surrounding country; that is, with neither fills nor cuts. The highway consists of a paved middle portion 36 feet wide, marked by a white line down the center of the asphalt and on either side a dirt shoulder 20 feet wide. Of the 36 feet of pavement, the middle portion constituting rather more than half of the whole is paved with asphalt, the rest constituting the outer portion on either side is oiled. Outside of this, on either side, are the dirt shoulders referred to. This makes, on either side of the center line, an aggregate of 18 feet as the combined width of the asphalt and oiled pavement plus the 20 feet of dirt shoulder. Clemens had with him three passengers; his wife, who sat at his right on the front seat, one Fern Rankin and one Don Housh, who sat behind them respectively on the rear seat. His brakes were in good condition and the range of his headlights was about 300 feet. One Joseph Melvin Jolley was, at the same time, proceeding southerly on his right side of the highway at about the same speed on a motorcycle, having behind him, as a passenger, one Smilie. It is necessary to depend largely, for an account of what occurred, upon the testimony of the appellant, Clemens, and the three others who were with him, who are the only surviving witnesses to the accident except Smilie. According to appellant the four had left his residence in San Diego between eight and nine in the evening and gone to a dance hall in Tijuana where they had a table, stayed an hour and danced. While there appellant had one “Tom Collins” (a concoction having a [59]*59basis of gin). Then they went on to Rosarita Beach where more dancing occurred and appellant had, according to his own account two or three more “Tom Collins”. On the way home the party stopped at the border and talked with the officers, including traffic officer Hoard, and then came on north. Just preceding the accident appellant says he suddenly saw a large 1600 pound stray horse of a dark brown color 25 to 50 feet ahead of him somewhere between the east edge of the pavement and its center line and that it appeared to be crossing the highway, that is, going west. He thinks its hind feet were probably a few inches off the pavement, and, though he applied his brakes and turned as sharply as practicable to his left in the effort to avoid the horse, he hit its head and “front shoulders”. He says that the horse might have walked a step or so in the meantime, but he is not sure. In passing the horse he first saw the motorcycle, which was then 25 to 50 feet away from where he then was. Its headlight was lighted. His own engine had been killed by the impact with the horse and he says that he was unable to avoid going further to the left side of the road into the path of the motorcycle, but he managed, after continuing a short distance, to stop. Meanwhile, to avoid Clemens’ car, Jolley deflected the course of his motorcycle to the east, and, though he did not hit the automobile, he did strike the horse and was killed in that collision. Appellant restarted his engine at once and turned his car around. He and the others with him assisted Smilie, who was injured, and appellant sent his wife on with his car to town to report the accident and get help. The horse, after the accident, was lying crippled about the middle of the highway with its head pointed east. The rear part of its stomach had been punctured by the motorcycle.

Respondent, Alma Jolley, the father of the deceased, testified to having had two conversations with appellant after the accident, one alone, in which he claims that appellant said that “he had a few drinks in him and maybe if he hadn’t had a few drinks and he got a little closer to the horse he would have saw the horse”. At the second conference with appellant, however, when Smilie also was present, he does not claim that any such admission was made. Appellant denies any recollection of making any such statement.

[60]*60Hoard, the state traffic officer, testified to an examination of the highway after the accident and finding marks on the pavement and hair where apparently the horse had been hit. These were about 40 feet north of where the horse lay. He found the motorcycle at the edge of the pavement some 65 feet from the marks. He saw no evidence of intoxication on Clemens’ part, either at Tijuana when the party passed through on their way home or at the scene of the accident, though he there particularly noticed Clemens’ conduct because when he had met him at the border there was a slight odor on his breath. He considered Clemens unquestionably sober. All three of the other occupants of appellant’s car testified at the trial but their testimony does not sufficiently vary from appellant’s own to justify restating it in detail. All claim that appellant showed no indication that night of being under the influence of liquor.

Smilie was riding, as we noticed, behind the deceased, who was a larger man, and in consequence he was unable to see forward. He says that the motorcycle was being driven about 3 feet to its right side of the center line of the highway. He remembers a “left dip” (that is, a lurching of the motorcycle to the left to avoid something), a white flash and nothing further until he waked up later that night out of a dazed condition to find himself still partially dazed, getting into an automobile. He had suffered various injuries which we need not here detail.

The present action was brought by respondents, who are Jolley’s parents and claim to be his heirs at law, to recover from appellant, Clemens, and one Inouye, the owner' of the horse, pecuniary damages which respondents claim to have suffered from their son’s death, which they allege to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants. A nonsuit was granted in Inouye’s favor but the jury found a verdict for $4,000 against Clemens, in addition to which the court’s conclusions were in respondents’ favor upon certain issues which had by stipulation been submitted to it, in consequence of which judgment was entered for respondents upon the verdict, and Clemens appealed.

In appellant’s behalf it is claimed as grounds for reversal, (a) that there is no evidence of any negligent act or omission on appellant’s part that could reasonably be found to be the proximate cause of the accident; (b) that the evidence' [61]*61indicates contributory negligence; (c) that the trial court erred in refusing to submit to the jury a special interrogatory as to whether or not appellant was under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident; (d) that the trial court committed prejudicial error in its instructions; and (e) that there is no sufficient evidence that respondents were the heirs of the deceased and as such entitled to maintain the action. Each of these contentions is on behalf of respondents disputed.

The first question, then, which we have to consider is whether or not the record reveals any substantial evidence of negligence on appellant's part. Respondents claim that the jury was entitled to believe that he did not keep a proper lookout.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P.2d 51, 28 Cal. App. 2d 55, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jolley-v-clemens-calctapp-1938.