Pedrow v. Federoff

247 P. 212, 77 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 321
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 18, 1926
DocketDocket No. 2960.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 247 P. 212 (Pedrow v. Federoff) 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
Pedrow v. Federoff, 247 P. 212, 77 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 321 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

HART, J.

This is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff Lydia Pedrow through and by the negligence of the defendants. The complaint alleges the facts in detail, and prays for damages—damage to Lydia Pedrow, damage to Thomas J. Pedrow, and for doctor’s bill and medicine, each separately stated—in the total sum of $1,750. The answer specifically denies the allegations of the complaint and sets up as a special defense contributory negligence.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury and plaintiffs were awarded judgment in the sum of $369.

The defendants appeal from the judgment, supporting the same by a transcript of the proceedings taken at the trial as authorized by section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The principal point is that there is no evidence which sufficiently supports the findings.

The plaintiffs, as the title indicates, are husband and wife, and, at the time the injuries herein complained of were sustained, resided in Yuba City, in Sutter County. The defendant Federoff was .at said time the owner of a taxicab business in the city of Marysville and locally en *168 gaged in the transportation of passengers from place to place for hire, and at the same time the defendant O’Neil was in the employ of Federoff as a taxicab driver. Yuba City is situated a mile or less from the city of Marysville, in Yuba County, the two places being divided by the Feather Eiver, across and over which a bridge for the use and accommodation of the traveling public is maintained.

The facts as herein stated will be based largely upon the testimony of the plaintiff Lydia Pedrow.

The home of the plaintiffs, at the time the injuries were received by Lydia Pedrow, was at 143 Kiley Avenue, in Yuba City. In front of their home was an embankment, which sloped perceptibly toward the curbing directly in front of the residence.

At and before the day on which the accident occurred both plaintiffs were employed at a laundry in the city of Marysville, her duties being those understood as a “press” worker. The elder of the two daughters of the plaintiffs was, at the time Lydia Pedrow received her injuries, and had been for a period prior thereto, attending school in the city of Marysville and the younger child was then attending school at Yuba City. J

Early on the morning of the twelfth day of May, 1924, Lydia Pedrow left her home in Yuba City for Marysville, for the purpose of purchasing a can of oil to be used in oiling a vacuum cleaner. She was accompanied by her two daughters and her husband, the latter going to Marysville for the purpose of resuming his daily labors at the laundry above spoken of. They arrived in Marysville shortly before 8 o’clock A. M. and, after making the purchase of the oil, she started on her return home. This was about 8 o’clock. She noticed a taxicab standing at a corner of a street in Marysville, not far distant from where she stood when she first observed the cab, and, being anxious to get back to her home as soon as possible because of the fact that her younger daughter was required to report at school in Yuba City at the hour of 8:30 A. M., she sent one of the girls to the taxi driver to inquire what his charge would be to convey the three to Yuba City. The charge for the service being satisfactory, she and the two girls entered the cab and were driven to Yuba City and directly to their home. The cab was stopped in front of her residence, the door *169 was opened (she stated by the driver), the two children alighted, and, as she was in the act of leaving the cab, her left foot on the running-board and the right still inside the cab—her body half in and half out of the cab, as she explained it—the machine suddenly started, or, as she several times described it, started to roll down the embankment, or, as she also once described it, the cab made a movement in the nature of a “jerk,” and she was by said jerk or movement thrown to the ground. The driver, one O’Neil, without assisting or offering to assist her to her feet, immediately started away and was soon out of her sight. She stated that she was unable, unaided, to get on her feet, but, after some effort, finally succeeded in getting into her house and on to a couch by crawling on her hands and knees. On getting into the house she began to realize that her left knee had been injured, as she was suffering much pain in the region of the knee-cap. She remained on the couch, unable to use her left leg, until her husband returned from his work in the late afternoon, when he sent for a physician, who called at the house, examined the injured limb, found a bruise on the knee, which was swollen, and some fluid in the joint. He administered temporary treatment of the injured limb' for the purpose of alleviating the suffering of Mrs. Pedrow, as far as thus it could be done under the circumstances. On the following morning the doctor caused the patient to be conveyed to his office, where he took an X-ray plate of the injured knee. The doctor, by the aid of the X-ray plate, discovered a “possible fracture of the upper end of one of the small bones of the left leg” (the “tibia,” as technically the doctor described the bone), “with an injury to the knee joint sufficient to cause a slight amount of fluid in there. I took her home,” proceeded the doctor, “and put a cast on her leg and thigh, immobilized the knee. ... I think she had the cast on for three or four weeks.” The doctor stated that the main injury to the leg was what is called an “impacted fracture,” further explaining that “an impacted fracture is not a bone broken off but just mashed in.” He stated that it would be difficult in such a case to venture a definite prognosis as to the length of time in the future during which the patient would suffer pain from the injuries she had received.

*170 After the limb was put in a cast, as above explained, Mrs. Pedrow was able to go about on crutches. From the time she was injured until the time she dispensed with the use of the crutches a period of about six weeks was covered.

Both plaintiffs testified that, for several weeks after Mrs. Pedrow was hurt, the husband was compelled to perform the household duties of their home. These he would attend to in the early morning before going to work and in the evening on returning from work. The elder daughter was required to remain home from school to assist her mother until the latter’s injured limb was removed from the cast. Mrs. Pedrow testified that she had suffered more or less pain from the injuries from the time she received them down to the time of the trial, a period of over five months from the time she was hurt. Particularly, in damp weather, she said, was the pain noticeable. She received as compensation for her work at the laundry, when employed, the sum of 119.50 per week.

The explanation by Mrs. Pedrow of the manner in which she fell or was thrown to the ground was in part corroborated by her daughter (the elder of the two) and a Mrs. Mack, a neighbor, whose house was next to that of the Pedrows. Mrs. Mack stated that she was out on her porch engaged in sweeping when the cab stopped in front of the Pedrow home. The Pedrow children first alighted from the cab, and then, as Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P. 212, 77 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pedrow-v-federoff-calctapp-1926.