Kline v. Barkett

158 P.2d 51, 68 Cal. App. 2d 765, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 830
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 1945
DocketCiv. 14613
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 51 (Kline v. Barkett) 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
Kline v. Barkett, 158 P.2d 51, 68 Cal. App. 2d 765, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 830 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment upon a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $18,000 damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a collision between her automobile and defendant’s truck and trailer.

On October 24, 1942, about 7 p. m., plaintiff and her husband left Las Vegas, Nevada, in plaintiff’s sedan automobile, intending to go to Los Angeles. The husband drove the automobile and plaintiff sat on the right side of the front seat. The collision occurred about 5 o’clock the next morning in Glendora, California, on Highway 66 approximately 350 feet east of the intersection of that highway and Pasadena Avenue. The highway for several hundred feet east and west of the place of the collision was straight, paved and 54 feet wide. In the center of the highway there were double white lines, and on each side of the highway there were two 10-foot traffic lanes which were separated by a white line. Adjoining each of the outer lanes there was a seven-foot paved shoulder. At the outer edge of the shoulder on the north half of the highway there was a cement curb. The 10-foot lane on the north side of the highway, next to the center, will be referred to as lane 1, and the other 10-foot lane on the north side will be referred to as lane 2.

• Defendant’s truck and trailer were 53 feet in length. The truck, also known as a truck tractor, had dual wheels in the rear and single wheels in front. The trailer had dual wheels in the rear but no wheels at the front and it was connected with the truck tractor by a swivel or fifth-wheel in the center of the rear of the tractor upon which the front of the trailer platform rested. By such a swivel connection the truck tractor could be turned or set “at an angle to the.trailer.” The platform or bed of the trailer was flat without side stakes or uprights, was four feet above the ground, 8¾ feet wide, and was made specially to carry two house trailers when loaded lengthwise thereon—one house trailer in front of the other. Two red lights and two reflectors were on the rear end of the trailer. The trailer was empty.

Plaintiff’s husband testified that he was driving about 35 miles an hour in lane 2 when he first saw defendant’s truck which was then “300 to 400 feet” ahead of him in lane 2; that at that time he observed three or four red lights on the *769 rear of the truck, but he did not observe whether the truck was moving; that the night was “dark” and he could not see the highway farther than the range of the automobile headlights, which lights were “on” the ordinary driving beam; that when he arrived at a point in lane 2 “50 to 60” feet behind the truck he turned the automobile to his left and “started to go” into lane 1 for the purpose of passing the truck; that he “did not get clear over” into lane 1, but as he was making such attempt to pass the truck the rays of a spotlight on an eastbound automobile which was traveling close to the center line of the highway, but south of it, struck him in the eyes and temporarily blinded him; that the oncoming automobile was then about opposite the front of the truck; that when the light was flashed in his eyes he applied the brakes, “turned back” and “stayed right in” lane 2, and after traveling about 50 feet, at the approximate rate of 35 miles an hour, collided with the rear end of the trailer; that he did not observe the truck or trailer after the light was flashed in his eyes until the collision had occurred; that the right front one-half of the width of the automobile for a distance of approximately three feet from the front end of the automobile was “pinioned” under the left end of the trailer; that the collision stopped the automobile immediately; that immediately after the collision he got out of the automobile from its left side, and the truck driver got out of the cab of the truck, and they had a conversation; that at that time the automobile “was directly in line parallel with the markings on the highway”; that at that time the right side of the truck tractor was within a few inches of and parallel with the north curb (as shown by the map in evidence), and the trailer extended diagonally into the street—the right rear corner of the trailer being about five feet from the north curb, and the left rear corner being about 13% feet from the north curb or 6% feet into lane 2; that his wife, who was sitting on the right side of the front seat at the time of the collision, was “pinned” under the wreckage of the right front portion of the automobile; that after he had extricated her he laid her on the front seat of the automobile, her head extending outside the left door of the automobile, and he held her head while awaiting the arrival of the ambulance; that her head was bleeding, and a blood spot, about one foot in diameter, *770 was formed on the pavement at the left side of the automobile while the automobile remained in the position it was in when the collision occurred; and that the center of that blood spot was about 15 feet from the north curb. On the way from Las Vegas plaintiff and .her husband stopped only at Baker, Bar-stow and Victorville.

Plaintiff’s son, who was called as a witness by her, testified that he went to the scene of the collision the next morning with plaintiff’s husband (his stepfather); that the blood- spot was about 15 feet from the north curb and about two feet north of the white line which separated lanes 1 and 2; that there were two skid marks just east of the blood spot—one being four feet and the other two feet in length; that the right side of the hood of the automobile was caved in, the cowl was pushed back, and the foot boards on the inside were pushed back against the front seat; that the first place along the north edge of the highway, east of the point of the collision, where there was no curbing, was at a drive-in restaurant about 1,000 feet away and at that place there was no curbing for a distance of approximately 150 feet.

Plaintiff was asleep at the time of the collision and did not testify concerning it.

The truck driver was in the armed forces at the time of the trial and did not testify.

The Chief of Police of Glendora, called as a witness by defendant, testified that he went to the scene of the collision about 5:30 a. m.; that the right wheels of the truck and trailer were “up against” the north curb; that he did not see any blood spot or any skid mark on the highway; that the automobile was parallel with the center white line on the highway and was not “angled into the truck”; and that it was “open country” at the place of collision.

Another police officer, called as a witness by defendant, testified that he went alone to the scene of the collision about 5:15 a. m.; that the right wheels of the truck and trailer were parallel with, and within one foot of, the north curb; that plaintiff was lying on the front seat of the automobile—her head extending outside the left front door, and plaintiff’s husband was holding her head; that plaintiff asked her husband what had happened, and the husband said, “ ‘I don’t know whether I went to sleep or what happened’ that he (this witness) assisted the other officer in making notes con *771

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 51, 68 Cal. App. 2d 765, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-barkett-calctapp-1945.