Jones v. Harris

231 P.2d 561, 104 Cal. App. 2d 347, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1623
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1951
DocketCiv. 4306
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 561 (Jones v. Harris) 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
Jones v. Harris, 231 P.2d 561, 104 Cal. App. 2d 347, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1623 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

Plaintiff, while riding as a guest in a Chevrolet automobile operated by defendant Harris, was severely injured when it collided with a Studebaker car operated by defendant Auer.. The accident occurred at about *349 2:30 a. m. May 29, 1949, on U. S. Highway 99 about 1 mile south of Pixley. A jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff and defendant Harris appeals from the judgment which followed.

The arguments relied upon by appellant are (1) that as a matter of law there was no substantial evidence to support a verdict, based upon the alleged wilful misconduct of appellant or upon which the jury could have found that his alleged intoxication proximately resulted in plaintiff’s injuries; and (2) that there was prejudicial error in the refusal to give an offered instruction as to contributory negligence as a defense to liability based on intoxication.

On May 28, 1949, at about 10 o ’clock p. m., appellant called at a cafe in Tipton where plaintiff was employed as a cook and invited her to go with him to the Shamrock Café at Pixley, about 5 miles north of Tipton on U. S. Highway 99. Plaintiff accepted the invitation. They stopped at a café en route where each had a highball. Upon arriving at the Shamrock Cafe, Harris and plaintiff had another drink and danced together. Harris then resumed his duties as manager of the café and until about 2 a. m. assisted the bartender, mingled with the customers and had a few more drinks. The bar and café were crowded. Plaintiff saw Harris dancing at times and working behind the bar but did not see him take more than one drink during the evening. Plaintiff danced, “sipped” a drink, played shuffleboard, and at about 1 a. m. told Harris that she was tired and would wait for him in his car. She was asleep in the automobile when, at about 2 a. m., after the café was closed, Harris, with Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, who worked in the café, came out of the café. The Hendersons seated themselves in the back seat of the automobile and with Harris at the wheel and plaintiff beside him in the front seat, they proceeded south on U. S. Highway 99. The accident occurred on this highway about 1 mile south of Pixley. At this point the highway runs generally north and south. It was straight and level and consisted of two lanes, each 9 feet wide with improved shoulders, each 6 feet wide. There was also 40 to 45 feet of smooth dirt immediately west of the west shoulder. At the time of the accident the northbound traffic was very heavy. Immediately prior to the collision defendant Auer, who was driving north in a Studebaker convertible, pulled out to his left across the white line into the southbound traffic lane and attempted to pass a truck and trailer traveling north in its proper traffic lane. When Auer pulled out he saw

*350 the lights of the Harris car coming toward him and estimated that it was between a half and three quarters of a mile away. He testified that as he was passing the truck he saw that he “wasn't going to be able to clear” because of the oncoming car; that “He (Harris) was coming at a terrific rate of speed and I didn’t see my way clear, and there was cars in front of the truck and trailer, and I seen that, and I knew I couldn’t make my way. So I swung over to the left real quick to avoid a head-on collision with Mr. Harris’ ear, and I applied the brakes a little bit to slow down and get off the highway so that Mr. Harris’ car could pass.”

Plaintiff was “drowsy” when Harris got into the car with her and did not then observe anything indicating that he was intoxicated. She testified that as they left Pixley, she observed a car coming towards them and that Harris was close to the white line; that “He was in his lane, and when this car came up it was awfully close, and I did make the remark to him ‘Why don’t you pull over a little bit Harris? You are crowding the white line ’ is what I said, I believe ’ ’; that Harris replied “The hell with you, I am driving this ear”; that she then noticed that he was “pretty intoxicated.” Harris was then driving about 60 miles an hour. Shortly thereafter plaintiff saw another car coming towards them around the northbound traffic, trying to get around a truck. She testified that “As we got nearer and the car couldn’t get by, couldn’t g$t over in its own lane, the highway was plenty wide there for Harris to get over on the shoulder and even off the shoulder. I remarked to him, ‘Harris, why don’t you pull over and let that fellow get "by?’ or something to that effect. Because he had plenty of room to pull over on the shoulder or beyond”; that Harris said “To hell with the son of a bitch. I am on my side of the road”; that Harris didn’t do anything with reference to changing the course of his car and that she heard him say: ‘ ‘ Brace yourself. I am going to hit him ’ ’; that she did not remember anything that happened thereafter until after the accident.

The two cars came together in the center of the west shoulder of the highway about 12 feet west of the center line, and each was damaged at the right front end. There were skid marks on the west shoulder 39 feet in length made by the Auer car before the impact. It was off the roadway and almost at a stop at the time of the collision. Auer testified that when he turned off the paved portion of the highway, the Harris car was “a good city block away.” A traffic officer *351 found no skid marks made by the Harris ear and that there was no physical evidence that it was on the shoulder until just at the point of impact. Harris testified that he applied his brakes just as Auer hit him.

Witnesses who observed Harris after the accident testified that he was intoxicated, and his blood analysis showed an alcoholic content of 2.0 milligrams per c. e. of blood. A physician testified that this test indicated that the person from whom the sample was taken was certainly intoxicated. In this connection, appellant admits in his opening brief that there was enough evidence for a jury reasonably to find that he was intoxicated.

Our province here is to determine whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, to support the findings and judgment, and to indulge all intendments and reasonable inferences which favor sustaining the findings of the jury. (Berniker v. Berniker, 30 Cal.2d 439, 444 [182 P.2d 557].) We are asked to hold that as a matter of law there was no substantial evidence to support the verdict of the jury. This we cannot do. There was substantial evidence that Harris was driving at an excessive rate of speed when passing heavy oncoming night traffic; that he “crowded” the white line; that he was requested by plaintiff to pull over a “little bit” when meeting a car before the accident; that although there was ample space and opportunity for Harris to turn his car out of the path of the Auer convertible and avoid the accident, he refused to heed plaintiff’s request that he pull over and let the Auer car by; that he deliberately continued southward heading straight toward Auer until it was too late to avoid the crash.

Wilful misconduct is divided into two distinct lines of action, either of which will render a driver liable to his guest for its results, as follows: first, “the intentional doing of something with a knowledge that serious injury is a probable

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Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 561, 104 Cal. App. 2d 347, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-harris-calctapp-1951.