Reed v. Simpson

196 P.2d 895, 32 Cal. 2d 444, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 235
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1948
DocketL. A. No. 20604
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 196 P.2d 895 (Reed v. Simpson) 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
Reed v. Simpson, 196 P.2d 895, 32 Cal. 2d 444, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 235 (Cal. 1948).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Plaintiffs, the surviving widow and minor children of John Reed, a California Highway Patrol Officer, brought this action for damages for his death, which occurred as the result of a collision between a motorcycle operated by the decedent and an automobile driven by defendant Robert Nathan Simpson. Judgment was entered, pursuant to .the verdict of a jury, in favor of defendants, and plaintiffs have appealed therefrom. As ground for reversal, plaintiffs urge that the trial court committed prejudicial error in instructing the jury. A review of the record establishes the merit of their position.

The accident occurred about 11:20 p. m., May 18, 1944, on Sunset Boulevard near the city limits of Los Angeles, where the decedent and his companion officer, Ralph Fritsche, were working as a pair on motorcycles under their assignment to oversee traffic in that vicinity. The boulevard, which extended in an easterly and westerly direction, was well lighted and the weather was clear. Traffic was rather heavy and was moving at about 35 miles an hour. The officers observed a west-bound automobile going down the boulevard in an erratic manner, oscillating over the center line. Deciding to apprehend the offending motorist, the decedent undertook pursuit down the west-bound lane of traffic adjacent to the center line, and Officer Fritsche followed at a distance of some 150 to 200 feet. The latter estimated the decedent’s speed at about 35 miles an hour and observed him driving the three blocks they traveled behind the eccentric vehicle. As the officers were so proceeding west in their course, defendant Simpson was coming east in his automobile, with three companions, and desired to turn left into thé driveway of a night club located north of Sunset Boulevard in the middle of the block. It was in the process of defendant Simpson’s execution of this left turn across the west-bound stream of boulevard traffic that the decedent’s motorcycle crashed into the right side of defendant’s automobile, and the decedent was rendered unconscious.

Each of defendant Simpson’s guests testified that he stopped in the east-bound center lane of traffic before attempting to make the turn, and that only the regular white headlight was displayed on the decedent’s motorcycle as he traveled down the boulevard. They were contradicted by a disinterested witness Weber, who had observed the accident from the window of his apartment facing the night club. He testified that he had noticed the vacillating vehicle traveling west with the [447]*447decedent trailing it about four ear lengths behind, when suddenly defendant Simpson’s car, going at a speed of 10 or 15 miles an hour, made a left turn in the center of the boulevard opposite the night club’s driveway and collided with the decedent’s motorcycle. He stated that he saw the white headlight burning on the motorcycle, and that he recalled some one turning off its red light after it had fallen.

Defendant Simpson testified that as he was beginning to negotiate his left turn on the boulevard, he stopped to allow three or four cars to pass and then proceeded as the nearest oncoming west-bound traffic was about 150 feet distant; that he did not see the decedent’s motorcycle before commencing the left turn; and that he did not stop his car again until the crash. Officer Fritsche did hot see the vehicles collide. However, on arriving within the “matter of a second” at the point of the accident, he observed that defendant Simpson’s car stood with its two front and left rear wheels north of the center line and its right rear wheel to the south thereof; that the decedent and his motorcycle were on the right side of defendant’s car; and that the rear wheel of the motorcycle was at the front wheel of the automobile and in the 10-foot lane north of and adjacent to the center. There were no marks on the pavement left by the decedent’s motorcycle, nor was there any testimony that its siren had sounded. While two of defendant Simpson’s companions fixed the decedent’s speed at the time of the accident as 50 to 60 miles per hour, Officer Fritsche, as above stated, estimated the decedent’s travel to have been at approximately the same rate as that of the other boulevard traffic, about 35 miles an hour. Officer Fritsche also stated that when he “got there, right after the accident,” the “red light was burning” on the decedent’s motorcycle, and that some one “turned [it] off . . . after the accident happened.” A disinterested witness Howard testified that he lived across from the night club; that on hearing the noise of the crash, he went at once to the scene, saw the red light of the decedent’s motorcycle burning and turned it off. The decedent never regained consciousness following the accident, and he expired at 6 o’clock the next morning.

The court, of its own motion, gave the following instruction: “The motorcycle which the deceased, Officer Reed, was riding at the time of the collision in question was an authorized emergency vehicle. The driver of an authorized emergency vehicle is exempt from certain traffic laws if (1) he is in the [448]*448immediate pursuit of "an actual or suspected violator of the law; (2) he sounds a siren in a way that is reasonably necessary to give warning of his approach to others; and (3) at night his vehicle is equipped with at least one lighted lamp displaying a red light to the front. In this case the evidence shows that there were others on said street and that Officer Reed did not sound his siren at all; therefore he was not entitled to exemptions above mentioned and he was required to comply with all traffic rules and regulations to the same extent as the operator of any other motor vehicle then and there on the highway. ’ ’

The premise of the instruction was section 454 of the Vehicle Code, exempting “ [t]he driver of an authorized emergency vehicle” from the “regulations contained in Chapter 6 to and including Chapter 13 of Division IX of this code” whenever such “vehicle is being . . . used in the immediate pursuit of an actual or suspected violator of the law. ’ ’ Particularly pertinent is the following proviso of subdivision (b) of the section as it read at the time of the accident here involved (Stats. 1937, ch. 69, § 2, p. 168) : “Said exemptions shall apply only when the driver of said vehicle sounds a siren as may be reasonably necessary as a warning to others and at night time when the vehicle is equipped with at least one lighted lamp displaying red light to the front . . . but said exemptions shall not relieve the driver of any said vehicle from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons using the highway, nor shall the provisions of this section protect any such driver from the consequences of an arbitrary exercise of the privileges declared in this section.” (Italics ours.)

Construction of the above-italicized phrase is the pivotal point in controversy. Plaintiffs maintain that the qualifying words permit the exemptions to apply upon the driver’s sounding of his siren as it may be “reasonably necessary” for him so to do, while defendants urge that such words refer to the manner of operating the siren, which warning in any event must be given if claim is made to the traffic privileges extended by the statute. A fair view of the disputed language sustains plaintiffs’ position as consistent with the evident purpose of the Legislature to provide a practical standard of procedure required of the driver of an emergency vehicle dependent upon the prevailing factual considerations demonstrating the “reasonable” need for sounding his siren.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 P.2d 895, 32 Cal. 2d 444, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-simpson-cal-1948.