Langham v. Norlander

137 P.2d 29, 58 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 7, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 14007
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 29 (Langham v. Norlander) 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
Langham v. Norlander, 137 P.2d 29, 58 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 75 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

The complaint herein alleged generally that the defendant so negligently, carelessly and unlawfully, op[544]*544erated his automobile while backing it out of a private driveway, that he ran over the minor plaintiff, a child aged sixteen months, “thereby throwing him to the ground with great force and "violence, ’ ’ and as a result thereof said plaintiff sustained severe and permanent injuries. The answer denied all allegations of negligence or carelessness in the operation of the automobile by defendant, did not raise the issue of contributory negligence, but alleged that the accident in question was unavoidable. The jury brought in its verdict in favor of defendant, and this appeal is prosecuted from the judgment which was thereafter entered pursuant to such verdict.

The record herein reveals the following undisputed facts; On April 24, 1941, the day of the accident, the Langham family, consisting of the parents, the injured child and his older brother, aged four years, had been residing for about one year at 11309 Killion Place, North Hollywood, which premises adjoined on the west the private driveway where the accident occurred. The Schultz family, consisting of the parents and two children, aged nine and six years, respectively, resided next door to the Langhams at 11303 Killion Place, which adjoined the driveway on the east. The Schultz home was on the rear of the lot and in front of both houses were lawns surrounded by picket fences on the outside, and separated only by the private driveway. This driveway was 14 feet 11 inches in width, to the right of which a large pepper tree was growing, and north of the tree close to the driveway was a small bush. The Schultz and Langham children and other children of the neighborhood were in the habit of playing on the Schultz and Langham lawns practically every day when the weather permitted.

Respondent Norlander had known Mrs. Schultz for many years and was a frequent visitor at the Schultz home during the four and a half months they had resided at the Killion Place address, calling there once or twice a week during the daytime, as he was working nights. Respondent testified that prior to the day in question he had noticed both the Schultz and Lang-ham children playing on the lawn in front of their homes; that he usually drove into the driveway and parked his car two feet off the driveway with the right wheels two feet over on the lawn, and on April 24th he parked his automobile “between the pepper tree and the bush, with the right front fender nearly touching the bush, ’ ’ and that when he drove in on that day he noticed the Schultz children in the yard but did not notice the [545]*545Langham children. Respondent went to the Schultz home with the intention of picking up his wife and taking her home, but due to the fact that Mrs. Schultz was ill, Mrs. Norlander decided to stay, consequently he remained about ten minutes and left, his wife accompanying him to his car. He opened the rear door of the automobile and placed a package of laundry in the back seat, meanwhile talking to his wife, who was standing “alongside” of him. He then walked around in front of the car, got into the driver’s seat, closed the door and started the motor. Before starting the motor, however, respondent looked out of the rear window and out of the window on the left side of the automobile. He said goodbye to his wife and the Schultz children and looking through the rear window he started to back his car out of the driveway. When he had traveled three-fourths of the length of his car, his wife shouted to him and he stopped after he had gone about the full length of the car. When he got out of the ear, his wife was directly in front of it, close to the right front wheel, and she reached and pulled the infant James Lee Langham from underneath the front of the automobile.

Respondent further testified that before he started the motor he looked directly out of the rear window and “could see the ground approximately at the entrance to the driveway, just a little inside of the sidewalk line”; that he looked toward the left on the driver’s side and did not look out of the right side of the car at any time, “only what I could see when I turned to my right and looked out of the rear window, what view I could catch of the road looking out of the rear window of the car also”; that he did not pay any particular attention to the right side; “as a matter of fact, the pepper tree would be in the way on the right side of the car ... in order to back up I would have to drive a little to the left in order to miss the tree, and when I looked out of the back of the car the tree was right at the right rear fender, in line with this bush.” He further testified that he had seen the injured child playing on the lawn many times before he drove in on April 24th.

Mrs. Langham, the mother of the injured child, testified that respondent drove in about half past four or a quarter to five on the day in question that he had been there for about five minutes when “I was sitting there, and I went into the house after my sewing, and left the children on the lawn; . . . they [546]*546were all there playing ... I went from the lawn directly into the house to get my sewing and a few things I had there, and I went right back, and when I got to the door—I didn’t stop for anything—they came and told me that Jimmie had been (hurt). ’ ’

Appellants urge that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment for the reason that respondent was guilty of negligence as a matter of law, when he backed his automobile in the private driveway of a family yard, without looking backward to the right and to the left to see whether any small child might be in or near the backward path of his car.

In support of this contention, appellants cite the cases of Cambou v. Marty, 98 Cal.App. 598 [277 P. 365], and Gorzeman v. Artz, 13 Cal.App.2d 660 [57 P.2d 550], In the Cambou ease it was stated at page 603: “Any reasonable man can be charged with knowledge that a child is apt to be found at any place about the family yard. Charged with that knowledge, it becomes his duty to use vigilance and care before setting in motion a dangerous instrumentality in that locality. Failing in the duty he is negligent. We cannot concede that it is a harsh burden to place upon a visitor at a family home. Where a life may be jeopardized by a failure to make certain a clear path it surely is not unreasonable, as a matter of law, to insist that ordinary care demands some precaution before starting an automobile. Nor is it unreasonable to include within the required precaution the duty here announced. In the annotation to 44 A.L.R. at page 434, it is said: ‘The tendency of the later cases would seem to indicate that the courts are requiring a higher degree of care on the part of the operators of automobiles toward children playing on or in proximity to their automobiles, particularly in those eases in which the driver had notice of the children’s presence in or about the machine. ’ At this stage of our economic program all the best thought is being directed toward child welfare and the promotion of the physical, mental and moral welfare of the generation to succeed the present. A logical following out of the idea would suggest that in all contact with children a higher standard of care be established as necessary to meet the law’s requirement of ordinary care under the circumstances. Concluding the present inquiry, it is obvious that a course of conduct which [547]

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Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 29, 58 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langham-v-norlander-calctapp-1943.