Mattenson v. Southern Pacific Co.

92 P. 101, 6 Cal. App. 318, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 336.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 P. 101 (Mattenson v. Southern Pacific Co.) 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
Mattenson v. Southern Pacific Co., 92 P. 101, 6 Cal. App. 318, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 143 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action for personal injury by defendant to Catherine Matteson, mother of plaintiffs. The cause *320 was tried to a jury and defendant had the verdict. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment. The accident happened on Sacramento street, at the crossing of Channel street, in the city of Stockton, on January 21, 1904. A train of thirteen or fourteen freight cars and caboose came into Stockton on the Oakdale branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad from the east along Weber avenue, which runs east and west; approaching Sacramento street the train moved on a Y diagonally through a block northward to get to the main line on Sacramento street at a point a short distance north of the Channel street crossing; reaching the main line with all its ears the train backed south toward the depot, situated on the southwest corner of Sacramento street and Weber avenue; at the rear end of the train was the caboose used for passengers; as the caboose approached the north foot-crossing leading across Sacramento street from the pavement along the north side of Channel street, Mrs. Matteson, going east, started to cross Sacramento street, and when about in the middle of the street was struck by the lower step on the east side of the caboose and in falling was caught by the car wheel, receiving the injuries complained of; she died on February 24, 1904.

1. It is urged that “there is absolutely no evidence to support the verdict in any particular.” This court will not disturb the implied findings of fact by the jury where there is substantial conflict in the evidence upon which such findings are based. In its review of the record the court is not called upon to set forth even briefly all the evidence submitted in support of the issues; it is required only to determine that there was sufficient evidence given to the jury to justify their verdict. The court cannot pass upon the credibility of witnesses or say that the jury erred in giving credit to one or more witnesses called by one party and in refusing credit to one or more witnesses called by the opposing party, or erred in believing part of the testimony of a witness and in disbelieving a part, or erred in arriving at a verdict by accepting a part only of the testimony submitted by both parties. The privilege as well as the duty of the jury is to reach a verdict from a consideration of all the evidence and the surrounding circumstances disclosed and, having thus reached a verdict on sufficient evidence, this court is powerless to disturb it. We are moved to make these observations because of our being constantly confronted by arguments against the sufficiency of *321 the evidence to support judgments and verdicts on the erroneous assumption that this court will reach a conclusion of its own from the evidence found in the record.

In this class of cases the stress of the argument is usually-found to be directed to the question as to whose negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, and the present ease is no exception to the rule. There was evidence that deceased was about seventy-four years old, but was in possession of all her faculties. She testified that at the time of the accident her hearing and eyesight were good, and her family physician testified: “For a lady of her age she was a remarkably healthy woman, remarkably so, a woman with a great deal of vitality.” The train arrived at the point of the injury shortly after 6 o’clock P. M. Some of the witnesses speak of its being “dark” and others as “dusk.” Deceased testified: “It was dark but light enough so that I could see the train.” Other witnesses testified that it was light enough to observe at the crossing of Channel street whether the train was moving toward or away from that street after it had got to the main line. There was a brakeman on the second freight car from the front end of the train and another brakeman at the rear end of the caboose. The front brakeman ran to the main line to see if it was clear and signaled from there; the train moved along the Y to the main track, the front brakeman taking his plabe on the ladder of his car as it passed; from this position he was signaled by the rear brakeman when the caboose had passed the switch and he in turn signaled the fireman in the engine, who gave the word to the engineer. The rear brakeman threw the switch and signaled all clear to back; the engineer gave three long blasts of the whistle and commenced to back, and as the caboose passed him the rear brakeman jumped onto the rear lower step on the west side of the caboose, from which point he could signal with his lantern to the engineer; when the train started to back the caboose was about two hundred feet north of Channel street; there was nothing to obstruct a view of the track or the train; it started slowly and did not attain a speed greater than four to six miles an hour. There was evidence that the caboose lamps inside were lighted before reaching Stockton and two lamps on the outside at the rear of the car, and the rear brakeman was on the lower rear step of the caboose with a lighted lantern; there was evidence that the bell was started to ring *322 automatically when the train began to back and that it was heard by the rear brakeman. He was asked what happened when the caboose passed the switch backing down toward Channel street. He testified: “I got on the rear platform of the caboose, the step on the west side, and I stood on the rear steps of the caboose. As I stood on the steps passing over the switch I came along down here, and as I come near Channel street—it was dusk, I couldn’t tell whether it was a lady or man—I noticed a form start from the sidewalk or from that direction, toward the sidewalk on the west side of the track; right from this sidewalk here. As they came toward the track I called out ‘look out there,’ and at that they came up near the track, I can’t say exactly how far, and hesitated, then started to go in a direction around behind the caboose. As they did I thought to myself they will never make it, so I jumps on the platform of the caboose—we have an air valve there, we call it the ‘gun’ in speaking on the railroad—and I pulled that wide open, threw all the air we had on the brakes of the train to stop. As I did, this party was just struck by the steps on the east side and thrown over on the ground. I immediately jumped down and see how it was. I was pretty well excited because I felt pretty bad to think it was an old lady of that kind. If it was my mother I couldn’t have done any more to prevent hurting her. I raised her up and kind of drew her back from the track. At that time I only could see the one foot, and that" was the left foot, was crushed, and the shoe was torn. I didn’t examine it to see how bad it was hurt, and I raised her up on my knee and my arm partly, and it was very near time for the passenger to come from Sacramento and we was on the main line, and as I was there, there was another employee of the company, an engineer by the name of Chase that I knew personally and once worked with, an employee of the company, and I says to him, ‘Dick, hold this lady here, look out for her until the ambulance comes, I have sent for the ambulance, I will have to get this train off of the main line. ’ He took charge of her, and then I resumed my position on the back end of the train and gave the signal to back.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P. 101, 6 Cal. App. 318, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattenson-v-southern-pacific-co-calctapp-1907.