Novak v. Peira

345 P.2d 349, 175 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1291
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1959
DocketCiv. 18339
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 349 (Novak v. Peira) 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
Novak v. Peira, 345 P.2d 349, 175 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1291 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

STONE, J. pro tem. *

Appellant-plaintiff, a pedestrian, was struck by a pickup truck owned by respondent-defendant Peira and driven by respondent-defendant Stoia. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants rendered pursuant to a jury verdict.

The accident occurred at 6 ;45 a. m. on September 24, 1956; the weather was foggy and damp and it was necessary for vehicles to use their lights and windshield wipers. The accident occurred at the intersection of Ocean and Otsego Avenues in the city of San Francisco. Ocean Avenue runs east and west and Otsego Avenue runs roughly northeast and southwest so that the streets intersect at something less than a 90-degree angle. Ocean Avenue is approximately 46 feet wide and there is a marked crosswalk where Otsego crosses it. The collision occurred on Ocean Avenue, either in or near the west Otsego Avenue crosswalk. At the time of the accident, the respondent Stoia was driving a pickup truck belonging to the respondent Peira in a westerly direction on Ocean Avenue at the point where it crosses Otsego. As Stoia’s pickup approached the east side of the Otsego crossing, the appellant was west of the Otsego crossing on the north side of Ocean. He had just purchased a newspaper at a news rack about 17 feet west of the crosswalk and intended crossing to the south side of Ocean Avenue to catch a bus. There is a conflict in the evidence whether appellant simply walked across the street from the paper stand to the bus stop or returned to the crosswalk before proceeding to cross Ocean.

Appellant’s first ground of appeal is that the court erroneously instructed the jury concerning the duty of care that the appellant as pedestrian and respondent as motorist was each required to exercise. Appellant correctly distinguishes between the degree of care and the amount or quantum of care required. (Lasater v. Oakland Scavenger Co., 71 Cal. App.2d 217, 221 [162 P.2d 468]; Breaks v. Anderson, 95 *32 Cal.App.2d 692, 694 [213 P.2d 532].) Appellant concedes that the court properly instructed the jury that the degree of care which the pedestrian and motorist each was required to exercise was that of ordinary care but argues that the court erred as to the amount or quantum of care required. Specifically, the appellant contends the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction and alleges that the court’s reason for refusal, that the substance was covered by other instructions given, was incorrect. Appellant’s proffered instruction reads as follows:

“I instruct you that while the rights of a pedestrian and obligation of all persons using a public street are reciprocal, the driver of an automobile being in control of such an instrumentality, capable of inflicting serious injury, is charged with a far greater amount of care than a pedestrian in order that he may perform his duty of exercising ordinary care.”

Although this instruction was recently approved by the case of Rubalcaba v. Sweeney, 168 Cal.App.2d 1, 5 [335 P.2d 141], it was not error for the trial court to give the substance of it in a different language (Libby v. Dunston, 72 Cal.App. 494, 496 [237 P. 565]; Dowdall v. Gilmore Oil Co., Ltd., 18 Cal.App.2d 1, 5 [62 P.2d 1051]; Johns v. Ward, 170 Cal. App.2d 780, 789 [339 P.2d 926]) nor do we find error because the substance of appellant’s proposed instruction was made a part of a larger instruction relating to the degree of care and the amount of care of both the motorist and the pedestrian.

The following instruction was given by the court:

“The law imposes upon the operator of any vehicle using a public highway, and upon a pedestrian, the same duty; each to exercise ordinary care to avoid an accident from which injury might result. This duty continues even when one has the right of way over the other.”
“While it is the duty of both the driver of a motor vehicle and a pedestrian, using a public roadway, to exercise ordinary care, that duty does not require necessarily the same amount of caution from each. The driver of a motor vehicle, when ordinarily careful, will be alertly conscious of the fact that he is in charge of a machine capable of projecting into serious consequences any negligence of' his own. Thus his caution must be adequate to that responsibility as related to all the surrounding circumstances. A pedestrian, on the other hand, has only his own physical body to manage and with which to set in motion a cause of injury. While, usually, that fact *33 limits his capacity to cause injury, as compared with a vehicle driver, still, in exercising ordinary care, he, too, will be alertly conscious of the mechanical power acting, or that may act, on the public roadway, and of the possible, serious consequences from any conflict between himself and such forces. And the caution required of him is measured by the possibilities of injury apparent to him in the conditions at hand, or that would be apparent to a person of ordinary prudence in the same position.”
“The amount of caution required to constitute ordinary care increases or decreases as does the danger that a reasonably prudent person, in like position, would apprehend in the situation.”

The degree of care required to be exercised in a given case is a matter of law but the amount of care required is relative. A court instructing a jury on the amount of care required must relate that duty to both the degree of care and the circumstances peculiar to the case being tried. This the court did by the instructions given. As is apparent, the instruction consists of three paragraphs. The first paragraph was taken from BAJI (4th ed.), instruction Number 201, the second from BAJI 201-E and the third from BAJI 102-A. The 1959 pocket part supplement to BAJI (4th ed.) recommends that instructions 201 and 102-A only (the first and third paragraphs of the court’s instruction) should be given and that Number 201-E (the second paragraph of the court’s instruction) should be deleted. This recommendation would, by implication, also disapprove of the appellant’s proposed instruction and, therefore, would preclude appellant from claiming error by reason of the instruction given. However, with due deference to BAJI, we point out that in Cucinella v. Weston Biscuit Co., 42 Cal.2d 71, 80 [265 P.2d 513], the Supreme Court approved BAJI 201-E in the following language:

“. . . If the particular instruction here requested by plaintiffs (No. 201-E) had consisted of only the first sentence thereof, which contains the expression ‘amount of caution,’ it perhaps would have been confusing to a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 349, 175 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novak-v-peira-calctapp-1959.