Parkin v. Grayson-Owen Co.

143 P. 257, 25 Cal. App. 269, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 1, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1246.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 143 P. 257 (Parkin v. Grayson-Owen 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
Parkin v. Grayson-Owen Co., 143 P. 257, 25 Cal. App. 269, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 358 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

The cause of action is for damages arising out of the alleged violation of the following ordinance of the city of Oakland: “No person shall leave or allow any horse or mule to he or remain standing upon any of the public streets of the city of Oakland unless such animal is in some way properly secured either by hitching or being under the personal control of some person of suitable" age.” This .is the second appeal taken- by the defendant in the .case and is from the judgment and order denying motion for a new trial in an action for personal injuries. The decision on the first appeal is reported in 157 Cal. 41, [106 Pac. 210].

In its opening brief appellant makes a statement of facts which is sufficient to give an understanding of the case, although respondent says that it is inaccurate in some not very important matters, inasmuch as the errors claimed relate to instructions given or refused. We shall use the statement as made by appellant:

“The plaintiff complains that the defendant’s delivery wagon, to which there were attached two horses, a black and a bay, were improperly hitched, and that by reason thereof the said horses broke from their fastening, ran north on San Pablo Avenue, turned easterly into Sixteenth Street and col *272 lided with the buggy in which the plaintiff, as driver, was riding with a doctor, overturning the buggy, throwing plaintiff to the pavement and injuring his knee.
“The driver of the delivery wagon, George Vincent, drove up in front of a restaurant on San Pablo Avenue, between 10:30 and 11 o’clock in the forenoon. Vincent had left the barn about 5 o’clock in the morning, and had completed his delivery. He was an experienced driver; was twenty-nine years of age, and for eight years had been a stage driver in Siskiyou County. He carried with him a hitching strap. He testified that he drove up to the restaurant, set his foot brake down hard and sufficiently tight to block the wheels, wrapped the reins three or four times around the brake, got down, snapped the snap of the hitching strap in the bit of the black horse, and tied it around the telegraph post. He further said that after he had ordered his luncheon he heard the report of a pistol. Before the driver could get to the door of the restaurant the pistol was fired again and the team broke loose.
“Vincent had previously testified that before he had gone into the restaurant he spoke to a small boy who had a toy pistol in his hand, and cautioned him not to fire.
“The strap that Vincent used for the purpose of hitching the horses was an ordinary hitching strap that had been patched, and there was considerable testimony at the trial as to this patching or repairing of the strap; plaintiff claimed that the strap was old and rotten, and insufficient for the purposes of a hitching strap.
“I. D. Tobin, a police officer, called by the plaintiff, testified that he was on duty that day, and before the runaway he noticed that the team was very nervous, and that the bay horse was crowding the black one up against the sidewalk. The black horse was pulling to and fro on the strap that he was tied to. ‘I noticed that the black horse was tied. ’ On cross-examination this officer stated: ‘ There was nothing in the action of the horses, or in the way in which they were hitched, to arouse my suspicion that there was any danger at all. So far as I saw everything was all right. ’ He also testified on cross-examination that ‘If the horse had not been properly hitched at that time it would have been my duty to have taken action in the matter. I did nothing. I saw how the horse had been hitched, how it was hitched at that *273 time. I patted the horse, he calmed down.’ Immediately afterward the runaway occurred.
“Defendant complains that the lower court committed error in the instructions it gave to the jury, asserts that the case was not properly left for decision by the jury, and takes this appeal in order that the issues involved may be submitted to a. jury under proper instructions.”

1. It is contended that the court erred in giving the following instruction, number 22:

“If you believe from the evidence that in order to have properly secured the defendant’s team upon the occasion in question a strap or rope should have been passed through the bit and around the neck of one or both of the horses in said team, then in such case I charge you that the defendant was guilty of negligence in merely snapping the hitching strap to the bit of one of said horses even though you further believe that said strap was entirely sound. ’ ’

The evidence was that the strap was fastened in the bit of the black horse next to the telegraph post.

Appellant makes several objections to this instruction: A, That the court had no right to suggest to the jury how the horses might have been fastened—viz, by passing a strap or rope through the bit and around the neck of one or both; B, It was prejudicial to suggest that to secure the team the strap should have been passed around the necks of both horses; C, That the court in so charging disregarded the' law of the case as laid down on the former appeal—157 Cal. 41, 48, [106 Pac. 210, 214], where the court said: “We consider it unreasonable to hold that when a team is left standing unattended the ordinance requires in any event that every horse constituting the team should be hitched”; D, The instruction leaves out the important things done by the driver, Vincent, to secure the team, i. e., in setting the brake down and wrapping the reins around it; E, The instruction in effect assumes that there is but one way properly to secure a horse, by passing the rope or strap around his neck and through his bit, and where there are two horses, the same should be done with both.

Appellant recalls the fact that at the former trial expert testimony was received upon the subject of hitching horses. At the present trial appellant says, in its brief: “Plaintiff *274 carefully refrained from calling experts at the time, and there was absolutely nothing said at the trial about passing a rope or strap around the horse’s neck and through the bit.” The brief states: “The court knew, and so did the jury, that the strap was snapped into the bit of the black horse, that it was not passed around the neck of either animal.” It is contended that “the instruction contained an element nowhere found in the evidence and was not fair to the defendant.” Also, that it was prejudicial “in that it suggested that to secure the team properly the strap should have been passed around the neck of both horses” and that the instruction “assumes there is but one way properly to secure a horse” or two horses where there are two, that is, by the way pointed' out in the instruction; and finally that the instruction disregarded the law of the case as held in the former appeal above quoted. We have thus grouped the claims made in paragraphs of the brief marked A, B, C, and E. Assuming it to be true that there was no evidence at all as to hitching a horse by passing the strap through the bit and around the neck, the most that can be said of the instruction is that it suggests something entirely outside the evidence. . The jury were told that if they believed from the evidence

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Bluebook (online)
143 P. 257, 25 Cal. App. 269, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkin-v-grayson-owen-co-calctapp-1914.