Mutch v. San Diego Electric Railway Co.

102 P.2d 1100, 39 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 399
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1940
DocketCiv. No. 2391
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 P.2d 1100 (Mutch v. San Diego Electric Railway 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
Mutch v. San Diego Electric Railway Co., 102 P.2d 1100, 39 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 399 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action for damages for injuries alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff. The court, sitting without a jury, awarded the plaintiff $1600 and the defendant has appealed from the judgment. Among other things, the court found that the plaintiff was injured as he was attempting to board a street ear operated by the defendant, when the motorman, without warning, started the ear and closed the doors, and the plaintiff’s left foot was caught in the folding step.

[329]*329The appellant’s main contention is that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings and judgment for the reason that it conclusively appears that it was a physical impossibility for the purported accident to have happened. It may be here noted that the motorman testified that on this occasion he stopped the car and opened the doors to admit another passenger; that he saw no one else and closed the door; that after this passenger paid his fare he looked to see that there was no vehicle or pedestrian in the way and started the car smoothly; that when the car had moved three or four feet someone slapped the side of the car door and asked him to wait a minute; that he stopped the car, opened the door and the respondent entered; and that from the time he first saw the respondent until the car stopped the respondent moved with the car and was on his feet. Another witness for appellant, a high school girl who was riding on the street car, testified to the same effect.

It should also be noted that there were two doors at the front end of the street car in question, with a stanchion or handhold between them. These doors were opened and closed by a mechanical contrivance operated by the motorman. The opening of the doors lowered the bottom steps and when the doors were closed these bottom steps were raised so that they stood on edge just outside the doors.

The respondent testified that as he got out of an automobile at the curb, he saw the street ear approaching and another man standing at the stopping place; that he went out to where this man was standing, before the street car stopped; that he carried in his right hand a box containing a microscope which weighed 35 pounds; that as the other man entered the front one of the two doors he placed his left foot on the bottom step of the second door from the front and took hold of the handhold between the two doors with his left hand; that he attempted to follow the other man through the front one of the two doors, swinging the box he carried ahead of him; that as he was doing this the doors of the car closed and the ear moved forward; that the closing doors skinned a knuckle on his left hand, but he got his hand out; that the folding step caught his left foot; that he fell back to the pavement but still held on to the box; that his left foot caught in the step and he took two or three hops on his right foot before the car was stopped and the doors opened; and that [330]*330he twisted his back and injured the left side of his body, including his foot, leg and hip.

This testimony corresponds almost exactly with a written statement which the respondent gave to the appellant, at its request, six days after the accident.

The testimony of the driver of the automobile from which the respondent alighted is to the same effect. He testified that the respondent, carrying the box in his right hand, went directly toward the door of the street car where the other man was standing; that the two men were about three feet apart when the car stopped; that he had a clear view of what occurred; that when the ear stopped the door opened and the other man got on; that the respondent “reached up and got the bar, put one foot up there”; that the door then closed on his hand and the car started; that the respondent hopped along on one foot and fell over on the box; that then someone in the ear “hollered” and the car stopped; that the respondent fell over on the box at about the same time the car stopped; and that the respondent immediately got up and entered the car.

The respondent’s evidence is partially corroborated, at least to the extent of showing that something out of the ordinary happened, by a part of the testimony of appellant’s witnesses. The high school girl, to whom we have referred, further testified that when the respondent boarded the car he took a seat beside her; that he immediately crossed his left leg over his right knee, pulled down his sock and looked at his ankle; that the motorman asked what was wrong and she asked him if he was hurt; and that he said he was not hurt but he continued to rub his ankle for a block or two. The motorman also testified that immediately after the respondent boarded the ear he saw him rubbing his shins and asked what was the trouble and that the respondent replied that he had a funny sensation; that to his question as to what caused it the respondent said: “I caught it in your car step”; and that he told the respondent this was impossible and that he must be mistaken, but that the respondent insisted that this had occurred although he said he was not hurt.

The respondent went to a doctor the day after the occurrence in question. This doctor died before the trial, and his testimony was not available. Another doctor testified that he examined the respondent four days after the date of the al[331]*331leged accident; that the respondent then had an abrasion or bruise on the front of his left foot, with some blackness, swelling and redness; that he had tenderness on his foreleg and thigh; that there was evidence of muscle strain and evidence of a sprain of the tendons, ligaments and muscles of the left leg and hip region; that he thereafter treated him twenty times; and that he seemed to be suffering pain from an injury. He further testified that the respondent had an arthritic condition which had been aggravated by strain or sprain. Before the cause was submitted, the trial judge, the reporter, the respondent and counsel for both parties inspected the street car in question.

It is not contended that the respondent’s evidence, if believed, is insufficient to support the findings and judgment. It is insisted, however, that this evidence is so inherently improbable and unbelievable that it must be disregarded in the light of certain facts which conclusively show that it was physically impossible for this accident to have happened in anything like the manner related by the respondent’s witnesses. Cases are cited to the proposition that a judgment may and should be reversed where immutable physical laws disclose the fact that the testimony upon which the judgment is based could not by any possibility be true. While this may be conceded it is also true, as pointed out in many automobile collision cases, that it is not always possible to tell what immutable physical laws are applicable in a given situation because of the many unknown factors such as, for instance, the weight of the respective objects, the force and direction of the blows, the time element, and the uncertainty arising from the actions and reactions of the human beings involved in the accident.

The contention that it was physically impossible for this accident to have happened in the manner claimed is based upon certain evidence of tests made with the car in question and upon a part of the testimony given by the respondent.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P.2d 1100, 39 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutch-v-san-diego-electric-railway-co-calctapp-1940.