Merey v. Los Angeles Transit Lines

339 P.2d 211, 170 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2236
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1959
DocketCiv. 23540
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 339 P.2d 211 (Merey v. Los Angeles Transit Lines) 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
Merey v. Los Angeles Transit Lines, 339 P.2d 211, 170 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2236 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a verdict and judgment wherein the minor plaintiff, Maria E. Merey (hereinafter referred to as Maria), was awarded damages in the sum of *459 $18,500, and Imre G. Merey (hereinafter referred to as “father”) was awarded damages in the sum of $4,236.16.

A résumé of the facts is as follows: The collision occurred at approximately 8 :42 a.m., on December 5, 1956, in the east-west crosswalk paralleling the northerly curb of Adams Boulevard at the intersection of South Broadway and Adams Boulevard in the city of Los Angeles. At the intersection in question, Broadway is 60 feet wide and Adams Boulevard is 52 feet wide. The intersection had traffic control trilights in operation, the time interval being 27 seconds for “go” or green, three seconds for yellow or “caution” and 30 seconds for red or “stop.” There were marked crosswalks, each of which was 17 feet wide.

Maria, at the time of the collision, was an 18-year-old high school girl, and was on her way to school. She had been a passenger on a bus northbound on South Broadway, and had alighted at the bus stop located south of the southeast corner of the intersection. She had walked northerly to the intersection where the signal was green, and as she walked northerly across Adams Boulevard, the light changed to yellow when she was about four to five feet from the curb at the northeast corner of the intersection. She testified in effect that she stood on the sidewalk on the northeast corner of the intersection because the light was red for her and waited, but not very long, until the light on the northwest corner of the intersection changed to green for her, and then she commenced walking westerly across South Broadway. She also testified, among other things, as follows: “I looked straight ahead to see if the light was for me, to go;” “. . . I was looking at the light;” “The light changed to green so, as I say, the green is for the pedestrian to cross, so I crossed the street.” Somewhere in the crosswalk approximately five to ten feet west from the easterly curb of South Broadway, she was struck by a bus traveling northward on South Broadway. She did not hear any noise like the sound of a horn, nor did she sec the bus prior to the impact, and the next thing she remembered she was lying in the street, and her foot was all red, and later she was taken in an ambulance to Georgia Street Hospital.

The bus was 35 feet long and 8 feet wide, and had a seating capacity of 48 passengers. According to the testimony of the bus driver Earl Cross, there were a few passengers standing in the bus when he stopped at the bus stop south of *460 the southeast corner of the intersection; the light on the northeast corner of the intersection was green, and he discharged one passenger from the rear door of the bus and one passenger got on at the front door. The bus stop was about 5 feet south of the southerly curb of Adams Boulevard. Cross also testified that he first noticed Maria walking in the north-south crosswalk approximately 5 to 10 feet from the edge of the northerly curb of Adams Boulevard, at which time his bus was traveling between 5 and 10 miles per hour in the curb lane proceeding in a northerly direction on South Broadway, that the front of his bus was approximately in the middle of the intersection, and that at approximately the same time he saw the signal change to yellow. He then took his eye off Maria, continued straight ahead and accelerated his speed to approximately 10 miles per hour. When he again noticed Maria she was walking straight ahead in the north-south crosswalk and was just a step or two from the northeast corner of the intersection, at which time the bus was approaching or was at the edge of the southerly boundary of the east-west crosswalk paralleling the north curb of Adams Boulevard, and that at this time he saw the color of the signal change to red. He stated that there was a spot between the windshield of the bus and the doorway where he couldn’t see and that he caught a glimpse of Maria through the door and when he saw her turn in the street to go across South Broadway, he swerved the bus, and when he struck Maria she was approximately 7 feet north of the extension of the Adams Boulevard northerly curb line and approximately 10 feet west of the south Broadway easterly curb line. When he brought the bus to a stop, it was approximately in the middle lane at about the northerly line of the east-west crosswalk. When he got out of the bus, Maria was lying in the street alongside the bus. He did not recall what he told the police officer at the scene of the accident.

The accident was investigated by a patrol officer of the Los Angeles Police Department, John Joseph Kramer, who, at the time of the accident, was on duty one block away at the intersection of Main Street and Adams Boulevard. He testified that he tried to determine the point of impact and that he did so by locating flesh and blood and red coloring from Maria’s shoe which was ground into the cement at a point 10 feet west of the east curb line of South Broadway and 7 feet north of the north curb line of Adams Boulevard. *461 He found 9 feet of one-wheel skidmarks leading from the point of impact in a northerly direction and ending at one of the front wheel of the bus, the front end of the bus being a few feet north of the northerly line of the east-west crosswalk paralleling Adams Boulevard. He testified that he spoke to Maria, that her left foot was crushed and that she said “I looked at the light and it was green for me, and I thought it was all right, and I started crossing the street.” He further stated that he talked to Cross, who told him the light changed to yellow as he was entering the intersection and that it changed to stop when he was half-way through the intersection, and that Cross had indicated a point in the street which he had measured off to be 23 feet south of the point of impact, as the place where Cross was when he saw that Maria was going to cross the street in a westerly direction.

There was also testimony by a retired police officer (Benton) from which an inference could be drawn that when the bus entered the intersection from the south, the traffic signal was red.

On direct examination Maria was asked what she did prior to the accident in the nature of activity that she was no longer able to do, and she answered, “I was working all the time during summers, and after school, every day . . . .” She testified further that she worked steadily full-time during vacations and part-time when she was in school from June of 1954 to the date of the accident when objection to such testimony was made on the basis that it was immaterial in that there was no request in the complaint for loss of wages. It was then stated that an amendment to conform to proof would be offered. Counsel approached the bench and argued the point (out of the hearing of the jury), after which it was ruled that the evidence would be allowed, and that the amendment to conform to proof would be allowed. No motion was made by the defendant for a postponement or continuance on the basis of surprise or hardship in meeting the new issue, and testimony was then adduced to the effect that Maria’s average earnings for after school work and Saturday work were about $15 to $18 per week. Bills were introduced indicating medical, hospital and other related expenses were incurred in the total sum of $2,436.16.

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Bluebook (online)
339 P.2d 211, 170 Cal. App. 2d 457, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merey-v-los-angeles-transit-lines-calctapp-1959.