Lammers v. Pacific Electric Ry. Co.

199 P. 523, 186 Cal. 379, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 456
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6457.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 199 P. 523 (Lammers v. Pacific Electric Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lammers v. Pacific Electric Ry. Co., 199 P. 523, 186 Cal. 379, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 456 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

WILBUB, J.

The facts are correctly stated in the opinion of the district court of appeal, and we adopt that statement of the facts, but with certain minor changes. For that reason we do not use quotation marks.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding plaintiff the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars as damages for personal injuries sustained, so it is alleged, as the result of being wrongfully expelled by defendant’s conductor from its passenger train while in a helpless condition and unable to care for himself at a time and place where he was likely to be injured by other ears of defendant which were being operated at and past the point of ejectment at frequent intervals.

The injuries suffered were serious. The left limb of plain7 tiff was crushed by the car-wheels passing over it at a point which made it necessary to amputate it above the knee. Several ribs were broken and he was otherwise injured.

At the time he sustained injuries plaintiff was about thirty years of age. He was low in mentality and scarcely able to converse intelligently on very ordinary subjects. He had been subject to epileptic seizures or some other nervous affection strongly resembling epilepsy, since the age of fourteen years, having as many as two convulsions a month. This affliction, together with his mental feebleness, made it unsafe for him to work with machinery or attempt any labor requiring the exercise of unusual care. He was, therefore, doomed to the performance of the simpler tasks of life.

While not habitually addicted to the use of intoxicating liquor, he was known to have indulged in its use upon occasions to a noticeable degree.

His home was near El Monte, some distance out of the city of Los Angeles and on the line of defendant’s electric railway connecting Los Angeles with various suburban districts.

*381 Plaintiff purchased a ticket at El Monte for Los Angeles and return on the evening of May 22, 1917. The purpose of the trip made by him to Los Angeles on this evening was to purchase some minor articles. On returning he took the 10:10 P. M. car for El Monte, occupying a seat with an elderly gentleman near the rear of the car. The conductor testified that plaintiff, when first observed by him,, was “slouched down” in his seat with his hat over his face, presenting the appearance' of a man half asleep or intoxicated. In response to a request for his fare plaintiff took out his pocketbook but was unable to find either ticket or money. The conductor had difficulty in getting audible or intelligent utterances from him. Upon being questioned as to his destination he stated that he was “going where dad went,” referring to the elderly gentleman seated at his side. When further questioned by the conductor as to where “dad” was going, plaintiff replied, “El Monte.”

Without any apparent reason therefor, plaintiff said that “dad” would pay his fare. The conductor asked the elderly gentleman if plaintiff was a member of his party and received a negative answer. Apparently he had no acquaintance with, plaintiff. Being unable, after a “jumbling” search, to find either ticket or fare, plaintiff was told, according to the testimony of the conductor, to get off the train at Covina Junction, about 10:25 P. M. This he did with the conductor’s assistance. The next morning at about 5 o’clock he was found near the left rail of the out-bound track about three-quarters of a - mile east of Covina Junction, badly mangled. Evidently he had attempted to make his way home. The defendant operates a double-track system from Covina Junction past the point where plaintiff was found.

Covina Junction is a railway junction in Los Angeles City. The train carrying plaintiff was a through train to El Monte. Covina Junction is a transfer point for passengers destined for Pasadena, Alhambra, and other points on the Pasadena Short Line, operated by the defendant.

It is the stipulation "of counsel that “Covina Junction ... is one of these little places where passengers can sit, but not in charge of anyone, and with no agent there; one of these shelters with a seat and a roof over it.” There is, however, testimony seemingly in conflict with the stipu *382 lation and to the effect that the waiting-room was about ten feet square with glass on four sides. The nearest residence house was about one hundred feet from the station situated on a slight bluff or elevation at the end of a bridge. The next nearest structure was defendant’s substation, about 150 feet distant. The testimony is uncertain as to whether or not either of said buildings was actually occupied by anyone at the time of the injury. The next nearest residence was from one-eighth to one-quarter of a mile east of the station. The roadbed of the track leading away from the station was built within the limits of a barranca with slight bluffs on either side. Especially is this true as to the elevation of the inhabited territory on either side. Excavations and depressions appear to have existed in the earth near the track along the route.

The conductor described plaintiff’s condition as follows: “I took hold of him, his left elbow, or arm—some place on the left side to assist him down the steps as he appeared very wobbly—couldn’t walk very well. He staggered before he reached the steps. He walked probably ten feet to the door. ’ ’

The conductor further testified that plaintiff did not fall at the time he left the car, but walked off a “little bank there in this ditch, walked down this ditch and that is the last I saw of him. I thought he might be down there until he sobered up.”

The elderly gentleman, Professor Hagen, a teacher of music, and one or two other passengers described the appearance of the plaintiff as a person plainly under the influence of liquor. He had offered the professor a drink from a pint hottle which he drew from his pocket. His articulation was indistinct. “Anyone could tell that he was not right,” is the way it was put. After being assisted from the platform to the ground he is described as “leaning backward and forward on his feet.”

Witness E. H. Watson testified that plaintiff was very drunk. “I heard him make some foolish remarks; that is how my attention was called to him in the first place.” Mr. Watson further testified that plaintiff had two bottles of whisky in his pockets. The testimony of the several witnesses who took special notice of plaintiff makes it clear that the .power of locomotion was plainly affected and a deficient *383 or disturbed mental condition was apparent. His conduct was neither boisterous nor offensive.

As a matter of fact, plaintiff had in his possession at all times a ticket entitling him to travel as a passenger, but he was unable to produce it at the time it was demanded. His speech was incoherent then as it was when a witness several months thereafter. Witnesses who had known plaintiff for a great many years described his affliction, its effect upon him, and the duration of said seizures,

Plaintiff seems to have denied that he was or had been drinking at the time he was expelled from the train. He claimed that the conductor charged him several times with being “stewed.” He also intimated that he was not given a full opportunity to find his ticket.

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Bluebook (online)
199 P. 523, 186 Cal. 379, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lammers-v-pacific-electric-ry-co-cal-1921.