Murray v. San Leandro Rock Co.

245 P.2d 347, 111 Cal. App. 2d 641, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1276
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 16, 1952
DocketCiv. 15139
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 245 P.2d 347 (Murray v. San Leandro Rock 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
Murray v. San Leandro Rock Co., 245 P.2d 347, 111 Cal. App. 2d 641, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1276 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*643 BRAY, J.

Plaintiff Margaret Murray sued for damages for alleged personal injuries. Plaintiff Martin Murray sued for damages to his automobile. The jury found for defendants on both counts. On motions for new trial the court denied Margaret’s motion and granted Martin’s motion on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence. Plaintiff Margaret appeals from the judgment entered on the verdict against her. Defendants appeal from the order granting Martin a new trial.

Question's Presented

Margaret’s appeal—sufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict.

Defendants’ appeal—alleged abuse of discretion in granting new trial.

Facts

1. On Issue of Liability.

Plaintiffs’ son Keith was driving with his mother in Martin’s 1936 De Soto sedan in a general westerly direction on East 14th Street in Oakland. Both Keith and his mother testified that they had turned into that street about three blocks from its intersection with 29th Avenue, and that at all times they were in the north, or right lane. Keith had slowed the car on seeing the yellow traffic light, gave a stopping signal and completely stopped as the light turned red. Both testified that they had been at a complete stop behind the pedestrian crosswalk approximately 11 seconds "before defendant Lawrence, driving defendants’ truck in the scope of his employment, drove it into the right rear of the car. Keith testified that he first saw the truck directly behind him as he was travelling about 20 miles per hour. He saw it next as it swerved to the left behind him. "While he was stopped he heard the sound of brakes, looked in his rear window and saw defendants’ truck appearing to come from the center lane and bearing down on him.

Defendant Lawrence testified on direct examination that he did not change lanes prior to the accident, and although he was looking straight ahead he did not see the automobile until he hit it. On redirect he said that plaintiffs’ automobile came to his right side about 35 feet from the intersection and then turned in front of him and that was when he hit it. Police Officer Gardiner testified that Lawrence immediately after the accident stated that he had glanced off to the left for just a second, and when he looked back the ear in front had stopped approximately 6 feet in front of him.

*644 Thus it appears that the evidence was conflicting. If the jury believed Lawrence’s story as last told (it was for the jury to reconcile that story with the one told on direct examination) there was substantial evidence to support a finding that the cause of the accident was Keith’s negligence in turning in front of the truck. So far as the appeal from the judgment is concerned, the conflict in the evidence apparently having been resolved in defendants’ favor, we are bound by that determination.

2. Margaret’s Alleged Injuries.

But in considering Margaret’s attack on the action of the trial court in denying her a new trial and yet granting her coplaintiff one, it would appear that the court believed that the evidence established defendants’ liability (certainly the weight of the evidence supports that conclusion) but that the evidence failed to establish that Margaret had been injured, and that the jury’s verdict was based on that theory rather than on nonliability of defendants. Therefore, we are required to consider the evidence on the implied findings of both court and jury that plaintiff received no injuries in the accident.

Lawrence testified that the ear and truck moved 3 feet after the impact. The police officer estimated 6 feet. Apparently Keith claimed it went further. Margaret testified that when the truck hit, she was bracing herself and was thrown about in the car, although she struck nothing. Keith was not hurt and was not thrown around. After the impact Keith drove the car across the street. Margaret then got out and called the police from a grocery store. When the officer arrived she told him she was not injured and did not want an ambulance. Three days later she went to see Dr. Walker and Dr. Toffelmier because her spine was sore and, the skin on her back was stinging. She took 8 months off from work (salary, $200 per month). She lost weight from 160 to 138 pounds, but has gained it back. At the time of trial she was still under care for disorders in the veins and nervous system. She has pains in her scalp and the back of her head. She testified that prior to the accident, she had many of her complaints except the tingling sensation, the head pains and those in and about the veins. In 1931 she was injured in the lower spine which caused her pain occasionally right up to the time of this accident. About a year before this accident she had injured both shoulders in an accident, causing pain for about a year. Dr. Toffelmier, orthopedist, testified that when *645 Margaret came to him a few days after the accident she complained of pain in her back and wrists. He concluded that she had sprained her shoulder and her back region in the accident. The X rays were negative. There were no objective symptoms of injury. There were some signs of tenderness. Dr. Hudson reported to him that Margaret’s complaints were “multiple and vague and rather exotic,” having no physical basis and primarily based upon a long-standing psychoneurosis. After consulting Dr. Hudson Dr. Toifelmier felt she should have psychiatric treatment. Six days after the accident he wrote that she had sustained a slight contusion of the left chest. On being informed that Margaret had testified that in the accident she had not struck anything he could not account for the contusion. Toifelmier testified that -her trouble might have been caused by the 1931 accident, and that her posture 'had been poor for years. After seeing Toifelmier Margaret visited some twenty or more doctors, some of whom testified. The consensus of opinion of these doctors was that Margaret is a psychoneurotic. Dr. Barr first saw. her in 1947. She then complained of pain in her low back, stiffness and soreness in fingers and wrist. He then diagnosed her condition as “fibrocitis which is rather a catch basket of psychosomatic rheumatic complaints and sometimes added inflammatic components and with psychoneurosis with mental depression.” Dr. Hudson, Dr. Truman, Dr. Allen, Dr. Tuchler, Dr. Gill, Dr. Nesche, all believed there had been a longstanding neurosis. Whereas Dr. Hudson and Dr. Nesche and Dr. Truman, doctors of internal medicine, testified that this accident might have aggravated her condition, and Dr. Tuehler, a psychiatrist, testified that the accident did cause a flareup, causing new signs and symptoms, on the other hand, Dr. Gill, an orthopedic specialist, believed plaintiff’s complaints were solely neurotic and not based on the accident, and even Dr. Truman thought nothing in her condition was a result of any injury on June 24, 1949. The report of Dr. Adams, read into evidence without objection, indicates that this psychiatrist also believed that plaintiff’s complaints were based upon a neurotic condition. The report does not express an opinion on whether or not the accident had anything to do with her complaints, such as to aggravate a prior condition. (The general tenor of this report is that the accident was more of an excuse to go to doctors for treatment; that her need to seek doctors was a neurotic one.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P.2d 347, 111 Cal. App. 2d 641, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-san-leandro-rock-co-calctapp-1952.