Little v. Los Angeles Railway Corp.

271 P. 134, 94 Cal. App. 303, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 654
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1928
DocketDocket No. 3567.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 271 P. 134 (Little v. Los Angeles Railway Corp.) 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
Little v. Los Angeles Railway Corp., 271 P. 134, 94 Cal. App. 303, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 654 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

This action is by the plaintiff to recover damages in the sum of twenty thousand dollars from the defendant for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the latter. The jury, to whom the issues of fact were submitted for decision, awarded the plaintiff damages in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars. Judgment was entered accordingly. A motion for a new trial was presented and pressed by the plaintiff on all the statutory grounds (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 657), and the same was denied. This appeal is by the plaintiff from the judgment and supported by a bill of exceptions.

The plaintiff received the injuries of which she herein complains in the city of Los Angeles between the hours of 5 and 6 P.M. ("just in the twilight," the conductor testified) of the twelfth day of November, 1924. She and other persons were, at the time mentioned, passengers on a street-car of the defendant, which was traveling in an easterly direction on Macy Street, in said city. It appears that a steam train of the Southern Pacific Company runs along and upon Alameda Street, which street runs in a northerly and southerly direction. The defendant's tracks on Macy Street run in an easterly and westerly direction. The latter's tracks on Macy Street and the Southern Pacific's tracks on Alameda Street cross at right angles at Macy and Alameda Streets. The tracks of the steam railroad make a curve as they run into Alameda Street. This curve is several hundred feet from and north of the intersection of Macy and Alameda Streets. On the day and at the hour thereof stated, the defendant's car, on which the plaintiff was riding, approached from the west the point at which Macy and Alameda Streets intersect. The motorman of said car proceeded to cross Alameda Street. When the street-car got on the steam railway tracks the motorman of the street-car suddenly stopped his car while it was still on the steam railway tracks. This (he stated) was because a large autotruck was stalled in front of the street-car. *Page 306 However, coincidentally with the stopping of the street-car as indicated, a train of the steam railway turned into Alameda Street and proceeded in the direction of the point where the street-car had been stopped and was still standing. Simultaneously with the appearance of the steam railway train on Alameda Street, and as it rounded the curve at Main Street, the safety gates maintained across Macy Street by the defendant were closed, or "went down" behind the street-car. As the steam train turned into Alameda Street the towerman's bell was ringing and continued to ring as the steam train was approaching the Macy Street crossing, and the headlights on the locomotive propelling the latter train reflected a bright light before the train and along Alameda Street and into the street-car. Upon observing the approach of the steam train, the passengers, or a large number of them, became frightened and greatly excited, and many of them about the same instant of time hurriedly left their seats and started toward the rear end of the car, where was located the only door in said car used for the egress of passengers. The passengers were for an instant bunched together at the rear end of the car, and some fell from the platform of the car, while others, from the consternation which had been produced among them, were shoved or pushed to the ground from the platform or the steps by other persons. The plaintiff in this action fell from the steps of the car and sustained the injuries complained of. These injuries were serious, so the doctor who professionally attended her testified. They consisted of a fracture of the ankle, "involving," the doctor said, "an outside bone, the fibula, about an inch above the ankle, which was broken in five pieces, and a fracture of the inside bone, which was broken once straight across; the ankle bone on which the weight of the body comes was dislocated backwards and inward. It was a severe fracture," continued the doctor's testimony, "and there is always a good deal of swelling with a bad fracture. There was a fracture of two bones. One of them was in five or six pieces, and the other had one piece broken off." The doctor further testified that at the time of the trial (March, 1926, some sixteen months after the injuries were received) the plaintiff was lame "and it is a painful ankle, and one that does not support the body weight well. . . . She is liable to suffer *Page 307 pain from this injury in the future. . . . She would not be able to do anything that requires her standing on her feet, or anything of that kind." The physician expressed the opinion that she would never in the future be able to do any kind of work which might require her to stand on her feet, but that she could, of course, do work which may be done while in a sitting position.

The complaint as originally framed and filed joined the conductor and the motorman of the street-car as defendants with the defendant corporation, but after both sides completed the taking of testimony in support of their respective positions in the case as made by their respective pleadings, and rested, upon motion of the plaintiff the action as to the conductor and the motorman was dismissed.

The seventh paragraph of the complaint sets forth the particular acts of negligence of the defendant which, it is alleged, were the proximate cause of the injuries plaintiff sustained, as follows:

"That the defendant railway corporation by and through its motorman, John Doe Bidwell, then and there carelessly, negligently and unlawfully caused, allowed and permitted the said street car on which the plaintiff was a passenger for hire to stop upon the said Southern Pacific steam railroad tracks, and upon which said steam railway train was approaching with a bright headlight focused upon said street car, and the conductor of said street car, Richard Roe Fort, then and there, while the said street car was stopped called `All out' to the passengers on the said street car, and the motorman then and there started said street car forward with a sudden and violent jerk, while the passengers in said car were pushing and crowding to get off the same and because of the sudden starting and jerking of the said car, and the crowding and pushing of the passengers thereon, the plaintiff and other passengers were pushed and thrown off from the said street car on to the pavement where the plaintiff was left lying, and the said street car proceeded on its way; that because of the aforesaid negligence of the defendants the plaintiff received injuries as stated in the following paragraph." (Here follows a description of the personal injuries received by the plaintiff and which is substantially the same as that given by the physician, as above shown.) *Page 308

The answer specifically denies each of the material averments of the complaint and, by way of a special defense, pleads contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, which negligence, it is alleged, was the direct or proximate cause of the injuries she received.

There was received at the trial a vast amount of testimony, largely that of passengers on the street-car at the time of the accident, describing the excitement and the confusion among the passengers, consisting of the rushing promiscuously and frantically of the passengers toward the exit door at the rear end of the street-car, when the steam railway train entered upon Alameda Street and proceeded toward the point where the street-car stood on the tracks of the former. It is not necessary to recite herein that testimony or the substance thereof, since counsel for the defendant, in their opening brief, make this very candid admission:

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Bluebook (online)
271 P. 134, 94 Cal. App. 303, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-v-los-angeles-railway-corp-calctapp-1928.