Knecht v. Lombardo

91 P.2d 917, 33 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1939
DocketCiv. 11812
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 917 (Knecht v. Lombardo) 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
Knecht v. Lombardo, 91 P.2d 917, 33 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 250 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of nonsuit entered in favor of defendants Helms Bakeries, a corporation, and Adolph Lowenberger, in an action instituted by plaintiff as the mother of her deceased minor son to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of the latter.

Epitomized, the facts disclosed by the record are that on the date of his demise the minor was slightly over seven years of age. At the time of the accident he was a student in the first grade at the Woodcrest Grammar School, to which institution he was returning after having had his lunch. The school is located at the northeast corner of 109th Street and Budlong Avenue in the city of Los Angeles. 109th Street extends in an easterly and westerly direction and is forty feet in width. Budlong Avenue runs in a northerly and southerly direction. Shortly prior to the fatality, defendant Lowenberger, employed by defendant Helms Bakeries, a corporation, and while in the scope and course of his employment vending from the auto truck the bakery products of his employer, drove the said auto truck over on to the south (wrong) side of 109th Street, headed in a westerly direction, and stopped his vehicle about six feet from the southerly curb of 109th Street, where he engaged in the making of a *449 sale of bakery products to one Dillman. Other vehicles were parked on both sides of 109th Street in the vicinity of the Helms bakery truck. While the sale and purchase negotiations were in progress at the truck, the deceased minor was standing in the street to the left of the purchaser, eating an orange. ■ His business with Mr. Dillman being completed, defendant Lowenberger started the bakery truck in a westerly direction toward the next house, forty to fifty feet distant, but continuing on the southerly (wrong) side of the street. About this time a motor truck entered 109th Street from Budlong Avenue and proceeded in an easterly direction, operated by one Pennington and owned by one Lombardo, both of whom were originally named as defendants, but as to whom the plaintiff dismissed the action on the morning of the trial. As the last-named truck passed respondent’s truck, it struck and killed the plaintiff’s seven-year-old son as the latter was running across 109th Street from behind the Helms Bakery truck. As the eastbound truck passed respondent’s truck the projecting stake body of the eastbound truck struck the child when he was at a point about the middle of the street, resulting in injuries to which he later succumbed.

Appellant takes the position that the location of respondent Helms Bakeries’ truck and the vehicles parked at the curb obscured the vision of Pennington, driving the eastbound truck, so that the latter could not see the boy until he emerged from behind the Helms Bakeries’ truck and when it was too late to avoid the accident, and also that the position of the aforesaid vehicles obscured and obstructed the vision of the boy from seeing the approaching eastbound truck prior to the time the minor reached a point approximately in the center of the street. This situation, appellant asserts, was the sole proximate cause of the minor’s death.

As her first ground for reversal, appellant contends that the motion for a nonsuit was fatally defective for the reason that the same failed to point out any of the grounds upon which it was made. In this claim appellant cannot be upheld. That the proceedings had upon the hearing of the motion for a nonsuit were sufficient to inform the court and counsel of the specific ground of the defendant’s motion is made manifest by the following quotation from the record:

“Mr. Young (counsel for defendants) : May it please the court, I move the court at this time for judgment of nonsuit *450 in favor of the Helms Bakeries and the defendant Lowenberger.
“The Court: I would like to hear from you on that, Mr. Hoffman.
“Mr. Hoffmann (counsel for plaintiff) : I have eases here that will sustain our position. It will be conceded by counsel that the Helms ’ man was violating the law at the time of the accident.
“The Court: He was on the wrong side of the street, no question about that.
“Mr. Hoffmann: Furthermore, he had violated the law by parking double on the wrong side of the street.
‘ ‘ The Court: Stipulate to that, too.
“Mr. Hoffmann: In other words, there can be no question he was negligent per se. The only question is did it contribute to the death of the boy.
“The Court: That is all.”

From the foregoing, it is at once apparent that the motion was understood by all concerned to have been made, argued and decided on the single ground that the negligence, if any, of the defendants was not the proximate or contributing cause of the accident in question. Appellant’s failure, when she heard the motion made, to complain because it was too general and not specific, coupled with the fact that the motion was argued at some length in the trial court, adds further support to the conclusion that appellant’s counsel knew and understood the sole and only question presented on the motion for nonsuit. The rule requiring a specific statement of the defects in the proof that has been made by the plaintiff when a motion for a nonsuit is made is for the court’s protection and has application only to eases in which the motion for nonsuit is denied, and not to an order granting it. In the last-named instance, the motion will be sustained if it might have been properly granted upon any ground, whether made a ground of the motion or not. (Anchester v. Keck, 214 Cal. 207, 212, 213 [4 Pac. (2d) 934].) See, also, opinion of the Supreme Court denying a hearing in Inderbitzen v. Lane Hospital, 124 Cal. App. 462, 469 [12 Pac. (2d) 744, 13 Pac. (2d) 905],

We deem it unnecessary, before proceeding with a discussion of the evidence, to set forth the rule governing the power of the trial court to grant a nonsuit, because the *451 same has been before the courts of this state on many occasions, and is firmly established by Estate of Lances, 21,6 Cal. 397, 400 [14 Pac. (2d) 768]; Estate of Flood, 217 Cal. 763, 768 [21 Pac. (2d) 579], In analyzing the proof to determine whether it contains evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict for plaintiff if such a verdict were given, we must disregard the fact that there is a conflict in such evidence, and give full credit only to that portion of the evidence which tends to support the allegations contained in plaintiff’s amended complaint. We cannot, nor was the trial court authorized, in determining the motion for a nonsuit, to weigh the evidence or judge of the credibility of witnesses. We proceed, therefore, upon the basis that plaintiff was required merely to offer competent evidence of such a substantial nature that it might reasonably be inferred therefrom that the negligence of the defendants Helms Bakeries and Adolph Lowenberger was the sole proximate cause of the minor’s death. That respondent Lowenberger was guilty of negligence cannot be denied.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 917, 33 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knecht-v-lombardo-calctapp-1939.