McLaughlin v. Los Angeles Ry. Corp.

182 P. 44, 180 Cal. 527, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 520
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 4885.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 182 P. 44 (McLaughlin v. Los Angeles Ry. Corp.) 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
McLaughlin v. Los Angeles Ry. Corp., 182 P. 44, 180 Cal. 527, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 520 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in the sum of $750, entered in favor of the plaintiffs, who sued as the children and sole heirs of Mrs. Adelia Ackerson, to recover damages for _ her death, which was alleged to -have been caused by the negligence of the defendant in the operation of two street-cars on East Seventh Street, in the city of Los Angeles. The action was tried by the court without a jury.

The undisputed facts are these: Mrs. Ackerson started to cross from the south to the north side of East Seventh Street at a point between San Julian and Wall Streets at about 6 o’clock on the evening of January 15, 1915. The defendant was operating a street-car line with a double track on this street. At the time in question, ears were approaching from opposite directions along these tracks at a reasonable rate of speed. No other vehicles were present. It was after nightfall, hut the street was artifieally lighted and the headlights and interior lights of both ears were burning brightly. The deceased, although she was sixty-six years of age, was an active woman in full possession of her faculties save for being a little hard of hearing. Both motormen saw her and sounded their bells vigorously. Nevertheless, the deceased *529 did not hesitate in her course across the street. She looked neither up nor down the street. When the motorman on the west-bound car realized that she was evidently bent upon going upon and across the tracks, he brought his ear to a stop so that the rear portion thereof stood across the path which the deceased was pursuing. Meanwhile, when the deceased was within two or three feet of the south rail of the east-bound track, the motorman on the east-bound car cut off his current and pnt on his air-brakes. The deceased entered upon the east-bound tracks, and, seeing the westbound car in her -path, hesitated and stopped and as she did so was struck by the east-bound -ear, sustaining injuries from which she died.

The trial court found that the deceased, under all of the circumstances, was guilty of negligence in entering upon the east-bound tracks. It is not disputed that this finding is supported by the evidence. Nor is it disputed that up to the time when the deceased caon-e within two or three feet of the south rail of the east-bound track, both motormen were justified in believing that she would avoid danger by exercise of due care. Nor can the finding be disputed that the deceased was not guilty of negligence in hesitating and stopping when she discovered the west-bound car in front of her. The undisputed situation, therefore, at the time it became evident that the deceased was going to attempt to cross the tracks was this: (1) She had negligently placed herself in a place of danger from which it was apparent that she could not or would not extricate herself, and (2) this fact was realized by both motormen. Inasmuch as the deceased was, admittedly, guilty of no further negligence contributing to her injury and death, the doctrine of “last clear chance” comes into play, and must cover and control the determination of the only question involved in the claimed insufficiency of the evidence to support the court’s findings of negligence. That question is this: Were the motormen, or either of them, guilty, after the time referred to, of a failure to use due care to avoid the accident I Responding to this question, the trial court found as a fact that both motormen were guilty of negligence after the -discovery of the predicament of the deceased and apparently rested its judgment for the plaintiffs upon this finding.*

We will first consider and discuss the question of the negligence charged against the motorman on the west-bound car. *530 Upon this phase of the case, the finding of the trial court was: “That the defendant, through its motorman in charge of its west-bound car running on its track on East Seventh Street, carelessly and negligently stopped said car in front of and in the direct path of the said deceased without any cause or reason therefor, and the said deceased was prevented, through said negligence and carelessness of the defendant and its said servant, from passing in the rear thereof in safety and without injury to her; that if said west-bound car had not been stopped in front of and in the direct path of said deceased, as aforesaid, sh‘e would have passed in safety over the south track and out of the zone of danger from the defendant’s car running east on its said south track; that because of said west-bound car being carelessly and negligently stopped and operated, as aforesaid, the said deceased, when at a position between the said tracks of the said defendant, and while in the danger zone of the defendant’s east-bound car, hesitated and stopped and was instantly struck by one of the electric cars of the defendant, which was then •and there operated east on said south track by the defendant and its servante in charge of said car at a reckless rate of speed, and the said deceased was thereby thrown violently to said street and was then and there seriously injured, from which injuries she died in about four hours thereafter. ...”

[1] The correctness of the fundamental facts found by the trial court concerning the operation of the cars and the movements and conduct of the deceased are not disputed, but it is earnestly insisted, and justly so," we think, that these fundamental facts neither warrant nor support the finding that the motorman on the west-bound car was guilty of negligence in bringing his car to' a stop across the path of the deceased. Practically the only evidence upon this phase of the case is to be found in the testimony of the motorman on the west-bound car and the admitted fact in the case that there was a space of about three feet between the cars in which the deceased could have stood in safety. The motorman testified as follows: “Belative to the south track, she [the deceased] was, I suppose, two or three feet from the south track—she hadn’t stepped over the rail yet, or on either track when I last saw her. As to the east-bound car’s front end at that instant-well, I suppose he was somewhere between half a car’s length, ■maybe a little over, in front of me. The woman was stilh. *531 walking north when I last saw her—hadn’t slowed up a hit, coming in the direction of my ear. I stopped my car as soon as I could, and that was pretty quick. I had an idea—I was pretty near positive that she was going to come on and with my car stopped she could get up to the side of it and he out of the way of the other—of course if they were both going she couldn’t so well. I think I stopped before the impact, before she got in there.”

It being conceded that the deceased was negligent, the neg-" ligence of the west-bound motorman can justify the judgment only upon the theory that he, as well as the east-bound motorman, had a last clear chance to avoid injuring the deceased. It would be without precedent, so far as we are aware, to apply the doctrine of “last clear chance” where, a® here, the injured person was never in danger from and not touched by the instrumentality over which the individual charged with negligence had control. Conceding that the west-bound motorman did have a last clear chance of avoiding injuring the deceased, the fact remains that he did avoid injuring her. She was imperiled in the first instance and ultimately injured and killed by the'impact of the east-bound car.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 44, 180 Cal. 527, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-los-angeles-ry-corp-cal-1919.