Peluso v. City Taxi Co.

182 P. 808, 41 Cal. App. 297, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 394
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1980.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 182 P. 808 (Peluso v. City Taxi 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
Peluso v. City Taxi Co., 182 P. 808, 41 Cal. App. 297, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 394 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This action was brought to recover -damages for the death of a minor son, and .the verdict and judgment were in favor of plaintiff for the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars.

[1] The evidence abundantly supports the finding that appellant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the death of the minor. Indeed, we rarely have a case wherein such affirmation can be made with equal assurance. The overwhelming weight of the evidence shows that the minor was riding slowly on a bicycle on the proper side of Eighth Street, in Sacramento. A taxi driven by an employee of appellant came from behind going in the same direction and traveling at a high rate of speed. No signal was given by the driver to warn the boy of the approach of the taxi, and when the machine was within a few feet of the bicycle, the driver swung it to the wrong side, trying to pass to the right of the bicycle and thereby causing a collision, which resulted in the almost instant death of the minor. *299 Several disinterested witnesses testified substantially to the foregoing facts. Of these we may quote Mrs. Mary Silva as follows: “Well, as we was going down Eighth Street, my attention was directed to a boy on a bicycle, and he was just coming along, and all of a sudden I heard a terrible noise, just a buzz, and I noticed it was a taxicab, and I ° noticed them about the—just a little ways past the car-track in the intersection on P. Street line, just four or five feet maybe, something like that, and the taxi was just coming at such speed that it swerved between the boy on the bicycle and the curbing, and the left of the automobile struck the hind end of the bicycle and threw the boy some distance from the bike and he landed on his head.” She further testified that the automobile was traveling “at least thirty miles per hour,” the boy on the bicycle not more than “seven or eight miles per hour,” and that she did not hear any signal given and that the deceased “was coming straight.” The testimony of the witnesses for the plaintiff, it may be added, shows that the boy was exercising ordinary care, that he was where he had a right to be and he had no opportunity to escape the danger, if he really had any apprehension of it. The principles of law applicable to such a situation are plain, have often been stated by this and other courts, and they need no repetition. As we are required to view the facts, it must be said that appellant was palpably negligent, that there was no contributory negligence on the part of said minor, and that appellant is legally responsible for the accident.

[2] It can be said with equal confidence that the verdict is not so large as to be properly characterized as excessive. In fact, under the circumstances the amount seems to be quite reasonable, and it can be properly said that the jury manifested a degree of moderation and justice that is not always shown in such cases. To set the verdict aside upon this ground, the excess must appear as a matter of law, or “the facts must be such as to suggest at first blush passion, prejudice, or corruption on the part of the jury.” (Bond v. United Railroads, 159 Cal. 270, [Ann. Cas. 1912C, 50, 48 L. R A. (N. S.) 687, 113 Pac. 366]; Slaughter v. Goldberg, Bowen & Co., 26 Cal. App. 318, [147 Pac. 90].) Nothing of this kind appears in the case at bar. The boy was fifteen years of age, strong and healthy, was working *300 regularly in the boiler-making shop of the Southern Pacific Company; he was receiving forty-five or fifty dollars a month, was the eldest of six children, and gave all of his earnings to his parents, for the support of the family. Regarding the question from a financial standpoint, which the law demands, and keeping in view the probabilities of the future if his life had run its natural course, it is rea- ° sonable to suppose "that he was worth more to his parents than the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars. [3] The recovery was not limited, of course, to the earning capacity of the son .during his minority, but it included the present value of the reasonable benefit which the parents would probably have received after his majority and during the period of their common expectancy of life. (Bond v. United Railroads, supra.) [4] The boy’s expectancy was about forty-five years and the father’s twenty-five, the common expectancy being therefore the 'latter period. We think we have stated sufficient facts to indicate the moderation of the award in view of the probable deprivation of the father of the services, earnings, society, comfort, and protection of his son for so many years. In the Bond case, supra, the minor was of the .age of twenty years and the award was for the sum of four thousand fiye hundred dollars, and in the Slaughter ease the verdict was for ten thousand dollars, the deceased being of the age of twenty-three years at the time of the fatal accident. In neither of these cases was the verdict held to be excessive. The facts of this case disclose even less reason for setting aside the verdict as immoderate and unconscionable.

Complaint is made of the action of the court as to the instructions and particularly of the following: “The word ‘damages’ as used in the preceding instruction (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 377), includes pecuniary loss of every kind, which the evidence in this case established with reasonable certainty, has been suffered and will in future be. suffered by this plaintiff because of the death of his son, Antonio Peluso. To arrive at the total amount of damages to be awarded you may consider not only what support plaintiff with reasonable certainty would have derived from the earnings and services of his son until he reaches twenty-one, but also, with reasonable certainty, after such age, and also *301 what pecuniary loss this plaintiff has suffered and will in future suffer with reasonable certainty by being deprived of the comfort, society, and protection of his said son)Antonio Peluso, not only until he reaches majority, but thereafter.” Appellant claims that there are two fatal defects in the instruction; first, “nothing was said to the effect that the jury should determine whether there was a reasonable probability that the conditions as to health and earning capacity of the minor son would continue ‘for some time after he became of age,’ ” and, second, “nothing was said about the point that the damages were to include ‘the present value of the benefits which it could reasonably be expected’ the minor son ‘would have bestowed upon his parents during’ his ‘expectancy of life,’ though this element of the expectancy of life of the father was mentioned in the course of the proceedings.” Another contention of appellant is, that the instruction failed to contain a caution against the allowance of compensation “for sorrow or distress” or for “a remote and conjectural pecuniary loss.”

[5] The defects, however, if they may be called such, constitute “sins of omission rather than of commission.” The instruction did not contain a misdirection to the jury, but rather an incomplete direction. In such case, an appellant is in no position to complain where he does not ask for a more specific and explicit instruction.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 808, 41 Cal. App. 297, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peluso-v-city-taxi-co-calctapp-1919.