Kruse v. White Brothers

253 P. 178, 81 Cal. App. 86, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 795
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5464.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 253 P. 178 (Kruse v. White Brothers) 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
Kruse v. White Brothers, 253 P. 178, 81 Cal. App. 86, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 795 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CASHIN, J.

Appeals by defendants from a judgment entered on a verdict for the plaintiffs in an action to recover for personal injuries.

*89 E. A. Kruse is the husband of Madeline C. Kruse, and the latter—who will be hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff—while crossing a public highway known as the Alameda, near its intersection with Tosemite Avenue in Berkeley, Alameda County, was injured by an automobile owned by the corporation defendant and operated by Meyer, one of its employees. As grounds for reversal of the judgment it is urged by appellant corporation that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a finding that Meyer was acting within the scope of his employment, and that certain instructions to the jury were prejudicially erroneous; and, by appellant Meyer, that the only inferences reasonably to be drawn from the evidence support his special defense of contributory negligence.

Meyer, who resided in Oakland, was there employed as a salesman for the corporation, a dealer in hardwood lumber, with its place of business in San Francisco. According to the testimony his working hours commenced at 8 A. M. and ended at 5 P. M., it being his duty during those hours to solicit orders for his employer, for which purpose the automobile was furnished by the latter. The automobile when not in use was kept in a garage in the possession of Meyer, the employer making a money allowance for this service. Some days before the date of the accident—which occurred on November 23, 1921, at about 6 P. M.—Bruce Bartholomew, who wished to purchase a quantity of hardwood lumber, communicated his wants to Meyer, and the testimony tends to show that it was the intention of the latter on the evening of the accident to call at the Bartholomew residence, which was situated at Colusa Avenue between San Pedro and Tacoma Avenues, one block southwest of the Alameda. At about 5 P. M. on that day Meyer drove the automobile from the yard of a lumber company, to which his duties had taken him and which was situated several blocks south and west of the Bartholomew residence, to a point several blocks east and south of the yard mentioned. He there by previous arrangement met Miss Kaeha Ingram, who also resided on Colusa Avenue, but four blocks northwest of the Bartholomew residence. Meyer testified that, accompanied by her, he drove back over the same route to Milvia Street, which runs north from the route previously traversed, followed this street to Hopkins Street and thence *90 through the latter to the Alameda. From this point for a considerable distance the Alameda runs in a northerly direction, thence turns to the northwest, from the turn running nearly parallel with the section of Colusa Avenue in which are situated the residences mentioned. These streets are connected by cross-streets, two of which, namely, San Pedro and Tacoma Avenues, lead from the Alameda to points between which is situated the Bartholomew residence, and two, called Capistrano and San Lorenzo Avenues, join Colusa Avenue farther to the northwest at points nearer the Ingram • residence. Meyer testified that he, with his companion, proceeded along the Alameda, passing San Pedro and Tacoma Avenues, and then turned to the northeast near its intersection with Capistrano Avenue into a street known as Lovers’ Lane, which follows a winding course in that direction, ending at Yosemite Avenue. The latter street, which Meyer followed, runs thence to the west and ends at the Alameda at the place of the accident, which was northeast of the residences and cross-streets mentioned. The distance from the junction of Tacoma Avenue with the Alameda along the latter to Lovers’ Lane and thence through the lane and Yosemite Avenue to the point of the accident was approximately 2,150 feet; and from the junction mentioned directly along the Alameda to the same point it is approximately 1,600 feet. Meyer further testified that it was his intention to turn at the place of the accident and proceed southeast along the Alameda to San Lorenzo Avenue, distant about 400 feet, and thence to the junction of the latter with Colusa Avenue, which junction is approximately 600 feet from the Bartholomew residence and 1,000 feet from the Ingram residence; thence to drive northwest to a point near the latter residence, allow his companion to alight, and then, if time permitted, to proceed to the dwelling of Bartholomew.

To prove that there was no diversion from the direct route to the latter residence plaintiff sought to show by certain physical conditions that, contrary to the testimony of Meyer and his companion, he reached Yosemite Avenue by a route to the east of the Alameda and Lovers’ Lane. On the evening of the accident, which was dark, vision being made more difficult by a thick fog, the plaintiff, who was proceeding to her home, in attempting to cross from the southwest *91 to the northeast side of the Alameda to a point a few feet to the north of a triangular parked space at its junction with Yosemite Avenue, was struck by the automobile driven by Meyer, which approached from the east along the latter street and turned in a northwesterly direction into the Alameda. Yosemite Avenue before reaching the Alameda divides in order to permit vehicles to pass to the north and south of the parked space mentioned, the north curb line of the avenue turning to the northwest for that purpose. The plaintiff testified that she stopped, looked, and listened before starting to cross; that she neither saw nor heard the approach of an automobile; that she then proceeded to the north of the parked space, where she stopped and looked east along Yosemite Avenue; that she saw the lights of an automobile in that direction which appeared to be stationary; that hearing no warning signal she continued her course to the gutter on the farther side of the Alameda and had placed her foot on the curb when, having seen no approaching light until immediately before the impact, she was without other warning struck and injured. Appellant Meyer admitted that the automobile rounded the curb to the north at a speed between ten and fifteen miles an hour; that he had not seen respondent until the car reached the point about two feet from the place where she was struck, and that the horn was not sounded.

While, as contended by Meyer, it was the duty of the plaintiff to use ordinary care for her own safety, her rights in the street, although not superior, were equal to his, and her testimony, if believed by the jury, was sufficient, in view of the circumstances, to sustain the finding that in pursuing the course shown she was not wanting in ordinary care. As stated, Meyer was a salesman, and while it appears from the testimony of officers of the corporation that he had been instructed that the auto should be used only for business purposes, it further appears from that of the sales manager that the latter knew that the order was not being strictly followed. The automobile was at all times in Meyer’s possession, and he was not forbidden to use it for business purposes after his regular hours, nor to permit others to accompany him while so using it. He was given a wide discretion as to his movements, not being restricted— *92 as might happen with an ordinary servant—to particular routes while performing his duties.

In Gousse v. Lowe, 41 Cal. App. 715 [183 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
253 P. 178, 81 Cal. App. 86, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kruse-v-white-brothers-calctapp-1927.