Raynor v. City of Arcata

77 P.2d 1054, 11 Cal. 2d 113, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 278
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1938
DocketSac. 5142
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 77 P.2d 1054 (Raynor v. City of Arcata) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raynor v. City of Arcata, 77 P.2d 1054, 11 Cal. 2d 113, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 278 (Cal. 1938).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Plaintiff received personal injuries when his automobile was struck by an automobile of defendant city which was being operated by the fire chief in response to an alarm. From a judgment entered on a jury verdict assessing the damages of plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, defendant city prosecutes this appeal. The action was brought under section 1714%,. Civil Code (now section 400, Vehicle Code), by which cities are made liable for injuries to person or property resulting from negligent operation of municipally owned motor vehicles by city officers, agents or employees.

The accident occurred in the intersection of Sixteenth and G Streets in defendant city. The Redwood highway proceeds along G Street at this point. Plaintiff was driving southerly along said highway at about 5:30 o’clock on the afternoon of March 20, 1933. The traffic was heavy on both sides of the highway. Plaintiff entered the intersection with his car *116 in second gear, at a speed estimated by him to be about twenty miles an hour.

The fire chief, James A. Wyatt, in response to a fire alarm, was proceeding easterly along Sixteenth Street. Plaintiff testified that he looked to the right and left as he entered the intersection, but did not observe the fire chief’s car. He also testified that he heard no siren or horn sounded. He did not know what hit him until he recovered consciousness after the accident, but thought perhaps it was an aeroplane.

The fire chief’s automobile was a Ford roadster painted red. The fire chief testified that when he heard the alarm, sounded as customarily by the blowing of a whistle at the California Barrel Company, he was at his home, a distance of five blocks from the intersection where the collision occurred. The number of blasts of the whistle indicated the general locality of the fire. As he proceeded easterly along Sixteenth Street the emergency red light on his car was lit and the siren was sounded continuously. The siren was a standard type used on fire equipment and was in working order. The speed of the chief’s car was estimated by witnesses at fifty miles an hour.

Complainant alleged that the fire chief drove at an excessive speed; that he failed to stop or slacken his speed at the boulevard stop at Sixteenth Street entering the highway; that the chief’s car did not have a proper or efficient siren, and that the chief did not sound a siren or other signal with sufficient distinctness to be heard.

Under our recent decision in Lucas v. City of Los Angeles, 10 Cal. (2d) 476 [75 Pac. (2d) 599], the vital issue in this case is whether the fire chief sounded his warning siren as he proceeded at a high rate of speed in response to the fire alarm. The plaintiff himself and the driver of the car immediately following his car testified that they heard no siren. Negative testimony of this sort is sufficient to create a conflict in the evidence as to whether a warning siren was in fact sounded. (Thompson v. Los Angeles & S. D. B. Ry. Co., 165 Cal. 748 [134 Pac. 709]; Keena v. United Railroads, 197 Cal. 148 [239 Pac. 1061]; Rogers v. City of Los Angeles, 6 Cal. App. (2d) 294, 296 [44 Pac. (2d) 465].)

Nevertheless we are of the view that the judgment in favor of plaintiff must be reversed as being incompatible with the *117 law as declared in the Lucas case, supra. In the Lucas case, supra, the plaintiff was a guest in an automobile involved in an intersection collision with a police car responding to an emergency call. It was contended that the police car was being operated at an unlawful rate of speed and that the driver was negligent in failing to obey a mechanical signal at the intersection, which showed "Stop” for traffic moving in the direction of the police car, and "Go” for traffic moving in the direction of the car in which plaintiff was a guest.

Our decision in the Lucas case, supra, reversed a judgment for plaintiff. Our opinion states that no contention was made that the siren was not sounded. A warning siren having been sounded, negligence of the driver could not be predicated on his rate of speed or failure to obey the ‘1 Stop ’ ’ sign. An authorized emergency vehicle responding to an emergency call is exempt from limitations of speed and other rules of the road, such as those relating to the right of way. The exemption from speed limits and right of way is statutory. (Secs. 120 and 132, Motor Vehicle Act, as amended by Stats. 1929, pp. 539, 542; later secs. 517 and 554, Vehicle Code; sec. 517 was repealed by Stats. 1937, p. 168, but see sec. 454, added by Stats. 1937, p. 168.) The exemption from other rules of the road has been established by judicial decisions, notably by Balthasar v. Pacific Elec. Ry., 187 Cal. 302 [202 Pac. 37, 19 A. L. R. 452],

The provisions in sections 120 and 132, supra, to the effect that the exemptions there given shall not relieve the driver of an emergency vehicle of the duty to drive with due regard to the safety of the public means that the driver must, "by suitable warning, give others a reasonable opportunity to yield the right of way ... ”. (Lucas v. City of Los AnAngeles, supra.) The sections also provide that the exemption shall not protect the driver from "an arbitrary exercise” of the privileges there granted. But an arbitrary exercise of said privileges cannot be predicated upon the elements of speed and failure to observe other rules of the road where a warning has been given. ‘ ‘ In such cases speed, right of way, and all other ‘rules of the road’ are out of the picture.” (Lucas v. City of Los Angeles, supra.)

In the instant case the evidence as to whether a warning signal was given was in conflict. The vice of the instructions given to the jury is that they authorize the jury to *118 predicate a finding of negligence on dhe fire chief’s speed and failure to observe the boulevard stop even though the jury should conclude upon the conflicting evidence that a sufficient warning signal had in fact been given. The effect of the instructions was to authorize the jury to determine as a matter of fact whether in traveling at the rate of speed shown and in failing to observe the boulevard stop the fire chief had driven “with due regard for the safety of all persons using the highway” or had been guilty of an “arbitrary exercise” of the privileges accorded emergency vehicles.

The court also gave the following instruction: “You are further instructed that when operating a fire automobile on and over the streets, a greater amount of care is required than in those cases of the use of motor vehicles where the maximum limit of speed is fixed by the law.” This admonition to the jury was repeated in the instruction immediately following, couched in slightly different phraseology. In view of the rule, declared in Lucas v. City of Los Angeles, supra, that the conduct of the driver of an authorized emergency vehicle responding to an emergency call is actionable only where it is in the nature of “wilful misconduct”, the above instructions were prejudicially erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 1054, 11 Cal. 2d 113, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raynor-v-city-of-arcata-cal-1938.