Moreno v. Herrera

260 Cal. App. 2d 418, 67 Cal. Rptr. 151, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1871
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1968
DocketCiv. 756
StatusPublished

This text of 260 Cal. App. 2d 418 (Moreno v. Herrera) 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
Moreno v. Herrera, 260 Cal. App. 2d 418, 67 Cal. Rptr. 151, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1871 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

CONLEY, P. J.

—The widow and four minor children, as sole heirs of Manuel Moreno, sued Willie Flores Herrera for damages caused by his death, allegedly due to the actions or omissions of the defendant as decedent was riding with him in his Chevrolet automobile in the late evening of May 14, 1965. The vehicle operated by the defendant made slight contact with another car, skidded into the concrete abutment of the bridge crossing the Old Arena Canal on Lincoln Boulevard in the vicinity of Livingston and overturned in the canal. In their complaint, as amended, the plaintiffs employed four counts, *420 alleging negligence, wilful misconduct, intoxication and negligent ‘ ‘ ownership, maintenance and use ’ ’ of the vehicle.

Denial of fault and contributory negligence and assumption of the risk were pleaded in defendant’s answer. Coneededly, there was no evidence showing contributory negligence on the part of Manuel Moreno, and we do not have to concern ourseves with that issue.

Originally, Mrs. Herrera, wife of respondent, was also named as a party defendant, but a nonsuit was granted as to her; the trial court also ordered a nonsuit with respect to any claim of negligence prior to the collision as against the respondent as there was no proof that the decedent gave any consideration for the ride, but the court submitted the ease to the jury on the theory of wilful misconduct and also intoxication. The general verdict was for the defendant.

It is not contended on the appeal that wilful misconduct of the defendant driver was proven as a matter of law, or that it was shown without conflict that intoxication was the cause of the accident.

The appellants urge only three reasons why, in their opinion, the judgment should be reversed: (1) they argue that the trial judge erroneously refused to submit to the jury the question whether defendant was negligent in not rendering assistance to Manuel Moreno after the ear skidded into the canal, pursuant to section 20003 of the Vehicle Code; (2) that the court was in error in instructing the jury on the issue of assumption of the risk; and (3) that the instruction that the defendant was presumed to have exercised due care was erroneous.

The two occupants of the automobile at the time of the accident were Willie Flores Herrera, the driver, and Manuel B. Moreno, the decedent; both of them were farm laborers with families living in the vicinity of the City of Livingston. In the early evening each had been at the Twin Cities Bar, about a mile and a half south of the canal bridge where the accident happened, part of the time together and part of the time separately; the defendant had also visited the Beer Garden bar in Livingston. Both had had several beers to drink prior to the accident. While the evidence differed from witness .to witness, the greater number said that Moreno had shown the effect of the alcohol which he had consumed, but that Herrera' wás not drunk. For a considerable period,.Mo-, reno had tried to induce Herrera to take him to Merced or Livingston to get more beer, and several times Herrera had *421 refused point blank to do so. However, shortly before 11 p.m., Moreno evidently convinced Herrera to take him to Livingston, for the two were seen together in the Herrera ear. Respondent urges that his consistent statements and testimony that Moreno was never in his car must be believed, for they constitute a conflict of evidence as to which the jury’s implied finding in favor of the defendant compels a conclusion that Herrera was alone in the automobile at the time of the accident; such a contention, however, relies wholly on barren logic and overlooks uncontradicted evidence that Moreno was seen in the Herrera automobile when it started out from the bar toward Livingston, and that the evidence of the finding of his body in the canal can reasonably be explained only on the assumption that he continued in the car until the crash. We would be blind to human experience and obvious facts if we were to guess, as respondent contends we should, that Moreno’s body got into the canal by some means other than through transportation to that point in Herrera’s ear.

While going down Lincoln Boulevard, Herrera apparently was traveling fast. There is some evidence that his speed was 60 to 65 miles an hour, but there is the estimate of another witness that he was moving at the rate of 80 miles per hour. In his course toward Livingston, he clipped the rear end of a car preceding him, driven by the witness Echevaria, and thereupon the Herrera automobile skidded approximately 200 feet, hit the canal bridge abutment, went into the air and fell on its left side in the canal. People who gathered at the scene of the accident waded into the swift-flowing water and ascertained that Mr. Herrera was in the submerged automobile. They extricated him and, using mouth to mouth resuscitation, finally brought him around. The witnesses at the time said that Herrera was then semi-conscious. Firemen, who were present to help resuscitate Herrera, asked him six or eight times whether anyone else had been in the ear and he finally shook his head in a negative response. There was testimony that at the scene of the crash he also told the motor vehicle officers that there had been no one else in the ear with him. This statement was repeated by Herrera the next day, in the hospital, and he took the stand in the case itself and swore to the same thing. It was contended throughout by his counsel that he was suffering at the time of the trial from retrograde amnesia, and he testified that he could remember nothing of the accident itself.

The day after the crash, in the late afternoon, the body of *422 Moreno was discovered in the canal some 150 to 200 yards downstream from the bridge.

The appellants contend that the defendant was guilty of a breach of section 20003 of the Vehicle Code which provides: “The driver of any vehicle involved in an accident resulting in injury to or death of any person shall also give his name, address, the registration number of the vehicle he is driving, the name of the owner, and upon request and if available exhibit his driver’s license to the person struck or the driver or occupants of any vehicle collided with or shall give such information and exhibit his license to any traffic or police officer at the scene of the accident and shall render to any person injured in the accident reasonable assistance, including the carrying or the making arrangements for the carrying of such person to a physician, surgeon or hospital for medical or surgical treatment if it is apparent that treatment is necessary or if such carrying is requested by the injured person. ’ ’

The uncontroverted evidence as to the immediate condition of Herrera after his rescue from drowning compels the patent conclusion that he would not then have been able, even if Moreno had also been promptly rescued from the canal, to carry him or even to make arrangements to carry him to a physician, surgeon or hospital for medical or surgical treatment. Appellants’ specific argument rather is that the positive assertion by Herrera by the shaking of his head that no one was with him in the car is the focal point of the claim of negligence on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
260 Cal. App. 2d 418, 67 Cal. Rptr. 151, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moreno-v-herrera-calctapp-1968.