Phillips v. Hobbs-Parsons Co.

227 P. 622, 67 Cal. App. 199, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 280
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2759.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 227 P. 622 (Phillips v. Hobbs-Parsons 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
Phillips v. Hobbs-Parsons Co., 227 P. 622, 67 Cal. App. 199, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 280 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. The cause was tried by a jury and a verdict returned for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was made and denied.

The plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

On the fifteenth day of November, 1920, near the hour of 5 o’clock P. M., the plaintiff, while driving a Ford roadster in a southerly direction along the west side of J Street, a public thoroughfare in the city of Fresno, an auto-truck, owned by the defendant, and driven by one Ray Summers, an employee of the defendant, was, so the complaint alleges, “suddenly and carelessly driven backward from the westerly curbing of J Street, where the car had been parked, and struck the automobile which plaintiff was, as aforesaid driving.” At the time of the collision, so the complaint alleges, it was “more than a half an hour after sunset,” and “it was dark, cloudy and raining, and the atmospheric conditions rendered the operation of vehicles dangerous to the traffic on and use of highways.” The result of the collision, so the complaint avers, was that the windshield of plaintiff’s automobile was broken, and a piece of the glass from said windshield was, by the impact, thrown against and struck the right eye of plaintiff “and greatly damaged and injured the same”; that the injury so received to his said eye was of such a character as that “plaintiff is compelled to wear glasses and is not able, and will not be able, to engage in such remunerative occupations as he would otherwise be able to engage in were it not for the injuries so received to his said eye; that the plaintiff, on account of said injury so received by him to his said eye, has been damaged in the sum of $25,000.” It is alleged that, at the time of the collision the said auto-truck of the defendant “had no lights either in front or in *202 the rear, as required by law, or at all, and said auto truck was then and there driven by said Eay Summers in a careless and reckless manner and without fault or negligence on the part of plaintiff.”

The answer, while admitting that the windshield of plaintiff’s automobile was broken by a collision between the latter’s ear and the defendant’s truck, on the occasion mentioned- in the complaint, denies all the other averments of the last-named pleading, and as a special defense, sets up the plea of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, which negligence, so the answer charges, was the proximate cause of the collision and the resulting injuries to plaintiff.

The plaintiff contends here that the evidence addressed to the issues shows, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff’s injuries were directly or proximately and solely caused by or through the negligence of the defendant or its employee, without any fault or negligence whatsoever on the part of the plaintiff. It is further insisted that the evidence upon its face shows that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence and that but for two erroneous instructions given by the court upon the question of contributory negligence, the verdict would probably have been for the plaintiff..

The evidence shows that at the time of the accident plaintiff was twenty-four years of age and was in the employ of the Standard Oil Company in the city of Fresno as its advertising manager, his duties as such requiring him to travel through some four or five different counties adjacent to and in the neighborhood of Fresno County, at various intervals of time. He had, prior to the accident in question, met with another accident in which he suffered the loss or use of his left eye or, as he described t¡he condition of the left eye, “I had no vision in my left eye at all—I could barely tell night from day, and my right eye was perfect.” He had never, prior to the accident in question, in which his right eye was injured, used eye-glasses.

The evidence, without conflict, shows that it was dark at the hour at which the accident happened—between 5 and 6 o’clock P. M.—that it was raining and had been prior to the happening of the collision, and that the streets, due to the rain, were “slippery.” The evidence, without conflict, further shows that the street in the block in which the accident occurred was lighted—that is, the street light's, four on each *203 side of the street in said block, were on and reflected their usual light along and over the street.

The plaintiff testified that, within a brief time after 5 o’clock P. M. on the day of the accident, he started from the office of the Standard Oil Company and went to a point on the street near said company’s office where he had parked his Ford automobile or roadster, intending, accompanied by a Mr. Beebe, also employed by said company, to drive to the place of business in Fresno of a Mr. Mugniani; that he and Beebe entered the machine and proceeded on their way south on the right-hand side of J street, at the rate of about twelve miles per hour; that, as driver of the machine, he sat on the left-hand side thereof; that the lights of his car were on; that he was “driving cautiously, the streets were wet and raining, and just as I got in front of Neilsen’s, why a truck backed right out into my car—at least, we got together right there in front of Neilsen’s and broke the ear up and smashed it all to pieces, in fact, and the windshield broke. Part of it went to my right eye, piece of glass into my right eye and cut it, and I went to the Emergency Hospital and later to the Burnett Sanitarium.” He stated that he was at the time driving “astraddle of the right-hand tracks of the street car, with my left wheel near the left-hand side of the right-hand tracks”; that the truck “backed out from the curb, I guess at an angle of 45 degrees towards me”; that there were no lights on the truck. The roadster came in collision with the “corner of the bed of the truck,” the plaintiff’s car being struck “practically in the center of the radiator.” He stated that he was within six feet of the truck before he saw it moving into the street from the curbing; that “it came right out within the scope of the lights on my car.” He further stated that as he was driving he was looking “straight through” the windshield of his car and could discern objects before ¡him, although, he admitted, the windshield was wet from the rain, the roadster having been parked and having remained in the street while it was raining before he started out with it and that at the time he was driving there was rain still running down the windshield.

The injury to his right eye was of a serious nature and the vision thereof materially impaired permanently, so the doctor who attended him testified.

*204 C. H. Beebe, the party riding with the plaintiff when the' accident occurred, was thrown against the windshield by the force of the collision and received a few minor bruises and lacerations of the flesh.' His testimony corroborated in all substantial particulars that of the plaintiff. He stated that at the time that the plaintiff was driving down J Street and just before the accident happened the rain was running over and down the windshield of plaintiff’s car. He declared, though, that his vision through the windshield was perfectly clear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P. 622, 67 Cal. App. 199, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-hobbs-parsons-co-calctapp-1924.