Mogle v. Hunt

293 P. 844, 110 Cal. App. 177, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1930
DocketDocket No. 159.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 P. 844 (Mogle v. Hunt) 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
Mogle v. Hunt, 293 P. 844, 110 Cal. App. 177, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 90 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CARY, P.

J.-—The plaintiffs, husband and wife, brought this action against defendants to recover for injuries received in a collision between plaintiffs’ automobile and defendants’ truck. A jury returned a verdict against defendant Vernon P. Hunt and from the resulting judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Defendants contend as ground for reversal: (1) that plaintiffs’ recovery is barred by their contributory negligence, and (2) that certain errors in instructions were prejudicial.

The facts follow. The accident took place on the outskirts of the city of San Bernardino. Tippecanoe Avenue runs north and south. Mission Boulevard enters Tippecanoe Avenue at right angles from the east and there ends., The collision occurred at the intersection thus formed. Plaintiffs’ roadster,' northbound, and defendants’ truck, southbound, both on Tippecanoe Avenue, were approaching this intersection at approximately the same time. As the defendants’ truck arrived at a point some 200 feet north of the center of the intersection, its driver signaled for, a left turn, which would have taken the truck east into Mis *179 sion Boulevard. At this moment plaintiffs’ car was an equal distance south o£ the center of the intersection and both vehicles were on their own right half of the pavement and were proceeding at a speed somewhere between twelve and twenty miles per hour. There are no traffic warts or buttons at this intersection nor are there any markings indicating the course to be traveled in turning from Tippecanoe Avenue into Mission Boulevard. When the truck had reached a point seventy-five feet north of the center of the intersection the truck driver repeated his signal and started to make the turn. In doing so he did not proceed past the center of the intersection as required by the California Vehicle Act, but cut the corner, hugging the east side of the curve from Tippecanoe Avenue into Mission Boulevard. At the same moment plaintiffs’ automobile, then approximately the same distance south of the center of the intersection, turned slightly to its left intending to yield the right of way to the truck and allow it to complete its turn. The truck driver, apparently believing that plaintiffs were going to continue their course straight north and thus render the completion of the truck’s turn into Mission Boulevard impossible, suddenly abandoned his turn, swinging his truck to his right and wobbling uncertainly from side to side, headed back to his right or westerly side of Tippecanoe Avenue. Plaintiffs, seeing the truck headed, as they thought, straight for them, veered still further to their left or westerly side of the road in an unsuccessful endeavor to avert a collision. The defendants’ truck headed southwest and the plaintiffs’ automobile headed northwest crashed at the westerly edge of the intersection.

The defendants argue that plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law because they turned to their left of the road, thereby violating section 123 of the California Vehicle Act, which provides that in crossing intersections a driver must keep his vehicle on the right half of the highway unless such right half is obstructed or impassable, and defendants cite the rule that where the violation of a statute by plaintiff contributes proximately to the accident it constitutes negligence per se and will bar a recovery. But, contributory negligence is a question of law only when from the facts reasonable men can draw but one inference—that the negligence of the plaintiffs proxi *180 mately contributed to their injuries. In all other cases the question is one of fact for the jury. (Flores v. Fitzgerald, 204 Cal. 374, 376 [268 Pac. 369].) We have read in full the testimony and feel that it is far from presenting a situation so clear that but one inference—that the negligence of the plaintiffs contributed proximately to the accident— could be drawn therefrom. We therefore hold this point to be without merit.

Instruction number 14, given at plaintiffs’ request, is as follows: “You are instructed that when the driver of an automobile upon a public highway has given a signal indicating that he intends to turn in a given direction, other operators of vehicles upon the highway have a right to assume that such driver so giving such signal will turn in the direction indicated by such signal, and it is negligence for the driver of a vehicle so giving such signal to turn or travel in any other direction than that indicated by the signal, without first indicating or signaling such intended change of direction.”

Defendants contend that by this the court, in violation of the constitutional inhibition (Const., art. VI, sec. 19) told the jury that the defendants were guilty of negligence as a matter of law regardless of the apparent danger which may have confronted the driver of the truck and regardless of anything he may have done. They argue that many situations might arise where, when he sees that some other vehicle does not intend to heed his signal, a truck driver might suddenly be compelled to change his course without having time to give another signal. If we view this instruction by itself the criticism is well founded, but instructions must Toe construed as a whole. By defendants’ instruction No. 30, given by the court, the jury were told that if after giving the signal for a left turn the truck driver continued on a straight course on his own right-hand portion of the highway because he saw that plaintiffs’ car and his own truck were in such proximity that a continuation of his turn would make a collision imminent, it was the truck driver’s duty to forego making his left turn. When the two instructions are construed together we are of the opinion that the effect of the second was to render any error in the first without prejudice.

*181 Instructions numbered 22 and 23, given at plaintiffs’ request, are as follows:

No. 22. “You are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs were negligent in passing to the left-hand side of the road at the time of the collision involved herein, knd by so doing placed themselves in a position of peril, and that the defendant saw and knew that the plaintiffs were in such position of peril, but could by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the injuries complained of, the defendants in this case are liable.”
No. 23. “If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs negligently placed themselves in a position of peril, which was known to the defendant, and that said defendant could have, by the exercise of reasonable or ordinary care, avoided the accident or collision but failed to exercise such reasonable or ordinary care, and that such failure on the part of such defendant to use reasonable or ordinary care was the proximate and efficient cause of the accident, such conduct of the defendant, if you so find, is negligence and the defendants would be liable for the damages suffered as a result thereof.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 P. 844, 110 Cal. App. 177, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mogle-v-hunt-calctapp-1930.