Keena v. United RailRoads of San Francisco

207 P. 35, 57 Cal. App. 124, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 626
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 3951.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 207 P. 35 (Keena v. United RailRoads of San Francisco) 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
Keena v. United RailRoads of San Francisco, 207 P. 35, 57 Cal. App. 124, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 626 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant to recover damages for the death of his minor child, a boy of the age of four years and eight months, who was struck by a Castro Street cable car on May 9, 1918, and from which wounds the child subsequently died. The plaintiff was awarded a judgment in the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, and the defendant has appealed under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

In his complaint the plaintiff alleged that the defendant’s *126 agent negligently operated the car, and by reason of such negligence the child was killed. The defendant answered! denying the material allegations of the complaint and! pleaded the contributory negligence of the child and also) the contributory negligence of the child’s parents. The; points made by the appellant asking for a reversal will be discussed in the order of their presentation by the appellant. [1] The first two points are so closely allied that they will be discussed together. The plaintiff requested, and the trial court gave, two instructions, which the appellant assigns as erroneous. One of the instructions; is as follows: “If you find that, at the time and place in question, the gripman in charge of said car saw said child upon or near the tracks and did not give any warning of its approach, and if you further find that he was negligent in not doing so, and that such negligence proximately contributed to the death of the plaintiff’s child, then your verdict must be in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.” The other instruction complained of is as follows: “If you find at the time and place in question, the gripman operating said car drove the same at a dangerous rate of speed, then I charge you that he was guilty of negligence, and if you find that such negligence proximately contributed to the death of plaintiff’s child, your verdict must be in favor of the plaintiff and against said defendant, United Railroads of San Francisco.” The objection, made to each of the instructions, is, that if an instruction by its terms, purports to settle the conditions necessary to the predication of a verdict, it must be correct in its entirety, and must not overlook pleaded defenses on which substantial evidence has been introduced. As the defendant had pleaded the contributory negligence of the child’s parents, and as it had introduced substantial testimony in support of its plea, the defendant complains that the instructions were erroneous, for, in legal effect, they directed a verdict even though the parents were guilty of contributory negligence. In support of its position the appellant cites and relies on Pierce v. United Gas & Electric Co., 161 Cal. 176 [118 Pac. 700]; Killelea v. California Horseshoe Co., 140 Cal. 602 [74 Pac. 157], The respondent attempts to justify the instructions by calling attention to the fact that each of the instructions contained the limitation, “That *127 such negligence proximately contributed to the death.” As we understand the respondent he would argue therefrom that if a defendant is negligent and the negligence proximately contributes to an injury, that then, and in that event, the defendant is liable, notwithstanding that the plaintiff is negligent and the plaintiff’s negligence proximately contributes to the injury. However, we think it is settled law in this state that in such a case as the ease before us a defendant is not liable if it is not negligent; again, if it is negligent, and the injured person is also negligent, and the negligence of the injured person proxi-. mately contributes to the injuries complained of, the defendant is not liable. The respondent also claims that, in other places, the court had fully instructed the jury on the defenses of contributory negligence and its importance as an element in the ease. However, the same argument could have been made, and was made, in those cases in which the same error was complained of as is complained of in this case. (Lemasters v. Southern Pac. Co., 131 Cal. 105, 108 [63 Pac. 128]; Rathbun v. White, 157 Cal. 248, 253 [107 Pac. 309]; Pierce v. United Gas & Electric Co., 161 Cal. 176, 184-187 [118 Pac. 700]; Tognazzini v. Freeman, 18 Cal. App. 468, 472, 473 [123 Pac. 540].) As the supreme court said in Rathbun v. White, 157 Cal., at page 253 [107 Pac. 311]: “Nor was the vice of the instruction cured by the general direction that plaintiff must establish every material allegation of the complaint by a preponderance of the testimony. This produced, at most, a hopeless conflict between the various instructions. The different declarations of the court were not capable of being harmonized. In such case it is impossible to determine which of the conflicting rules presented to them was followed by the jury and the error in any of the instructions must be deemed prejudicial. (Estate of Cunningham, 52 Cal. 465; Sappenfield v. Main St. R. R. Co., 91 Cal. 48 [27 Pac. 590].)” The respondent attempts to distinguish the Pierce ease by calling attention to the fact that there were two children involved. However, the most cursory examination of the case shows that the instruction complained of, and which was held to be prejudicially erroneous, was faulty, not because of the number that had been injured, but by reason of the fact that the instruction took from the jury material *128 facts pertinent to the issues on trial. The respondent attempts to distinguish the Killelea ease by pointing out that in that case the court “recited the evidence and virtually told the • jury that if they found the evidence was true ‘then I charge you that the defendant is guilty of negligence and plaintiff is entitled to a verdict.’ ” True, but the instructions complained of in this ease did the same thing. The trial court recited merely the evidence of the defendant’s negligence, and the jury was directed that if they found that the defendant was so negligent that then, and in that event, it should return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and, in so doing, the case of the plaintiff on the issue of contributory negligence was entirely ignored.

In what we have said above we are not to be understood as holding that either instruction was a sound proposition of law in all other respects.

The appellant complains of another instruction which is as follows: “If you find that the mother of said child permitted the child to go upon the street in front of the house and across the street therefrom, and that she made frequent trips to the window to watch said child, and if you find that she exercised reasonable care in that regard, and that during one of the intervals of time between the mother going to the window, the said child wandered away from where he had been playing, and that the interval of time was not longer than that which would be ordinarily permitted by an ordinarily prudent person under the same circumstances, then contributory negligence cannot be imputed to.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P. 35, 57 Cal. App. 124, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keena-v-united-railroads-of-san-francisco-calctapp-1922.