Roller v. Daleys Incorporated

28 P.2d 345, 219 Cal. 542, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 431
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13188.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 345 (Roller v. Daleys Incorporated) 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
Roller v. Daleys Incorporated, 28 P.2d 345, 219 Cal. 542, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 431 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

Appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict for the plaintiff in an action to recover damages for personal injuries.

The injuries were sustained by Emma F. Roller, who will be referred to herein as the plaintiff, in an automobile accident which occurred at the intersection of D Street and Highland Avenue in the city of San Bernardino. D Street runs in a northerly and southerly direction and intersects Highland Avenue at right angles. The roadway of D Street north of Highland Avenue is thirty feet wide. Highland Avenue is sixty feet wide from curb to curb, except that at the southeast corner of the intersection its area is increased by the diagonal lopping off of the corner of the property line and sidewalk thus giving extra street area for the street-car turn at that corner.

An ordinance of the city required motorists entering the intersection from D Street north of Highland Avenue to come to a full stop before proceeding into the intersection. A boulevard stop sign was maintained at an appropriate place. After midnight of December 11, 1929, the plaintiff was driving alone south along D Street in a Ford sedan. She testified that as she approached Highland Avenue she came to a full stop, at the same time edging more to the right in order to allow a car which was making a short left turn northerly into D Street from Highland Avenue to pass her car. According to the plaintiff’s testimony she looked to the west and saw no traffic and then looked to the east and saw no traffic, and specifically that, looking easterly, she saw no traffic in the northerly half of Highland Avenue. There is a clear view down Highland Avenue to the east from where the plaintiff said she stopped. She did not look to the east again and proceeded south across the intersection. Somewhere at or south of the center line of Highland Avenue she testified that her ear was struck by a truck and was turned over. The serious injuries received by the plaintiff were principally in the right knee and resulted in a perma *544 nent stiffening of the knee-joint and shortening of the right leg, causing a noticeable limp. Issues • were raised on the questions of the defendant's negligence and the plaintiff’s contributory negligence. The jury returned a verdict of $30,000.

The main contentions on the appeal are that certain instructions were prejudicially erroneous and that the evidence does not support a finding of negligence on the part of the defendant, nor a finding that the plaintiff was not contributorily negligent, nor a finding that the truck collided with the Ford. However, on the last point, there was evidence, including an admission of the defendant, that its truck and driver were in the vicinity at the time, and it was a question for the jury to determine from all the facts and circumstances as testified to by the plaintiff and other witnesses, including their testimony as to the relative positions of the two vehicles after the accident, whether the plaintiff’s car was overturned by an independent act of her own or whether she was struck by the defendant’s truck. We cannot say that, under the facts disclosed the questions of negligence and contributory negligence, although close, were not properly for the jury.

The trial court by instruction numbered three, stated to the jury that “the duty devolving upon plaintiff ... as an ordinarily prudent woman to look in the direction from which danger was to be anticipated did not require that before proceeding across Highland avenue . . . she first ascertain that there were no vehicles traveling westerly over and along any portion of Highland avenue east of D street other than that portion over which vehicles would ordinarily and legally travel while going in a westerly direction.” By instruction four, after reading the applicable portion of sections 112 and 123 of the California Vehicle Act relating to the duty of drivers to keep on the right unless the right is obstructed or impassable, the court stated: “If you find from the evidence in this case that Frank A. Hamilton was not at the time of and immediately prior to the accident driving the truck . . .upon the right half of the street and that it was practicable to travel upon the right half of said street, and that such street was not a one-way street, then you are instructed that he was guilty of negligence as a matter of law.” Instruction numbered seven was as follows: *545 “If you find from the evidence that the accident and collision, if any, occurred south of the middle line of Highland avenue, and you find from the evidence that the intersection of Highland avenue and D street was clear at the time Mrs. Roller entered it, then I instruct you that she had a right to assume that no car or truck would enter the intersection from the east and south of the medial or middle line of Highland avenue and collide with her south of such line in the intersection, and if you find from the evidence that Prank A. Hamilton entered the intersection from the east and south of the middle line of Highland avenue, then you are instructed that the defendant . . . was guilty of negligence as a matter of law, and if you find that such negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of Mrs. Roller’s injuries and that she was not guilty of negligence contributing proximately thereto, your verdict must be for the plaintiffs.”

By the foregoing instructions the jury was told that if the truck was traveling on its left side of the street when no obstruction compelled it to do so, it was guilty of negligence as a matter of law. There was no evidence of the condition of the street. The jury was instructed further that if the entire street was passable the plaintiff need not look to the east only along the northerly half of Highland Avenue for vehicles traveling in a westerly direction; and further that if the intersection was clear when she entered it she could assume that no truck or vehicle would enter the intersection from the east along the south half of Highland Avenue. These instructions viewed in the light of the close questions of fact and the large amount of the verdict, demonstrate error of a prejudicial nature. It has unequivocally been held that instructions of the character of those complained of are prejudicially erroneous because they take from the jury an issue which under the evidence raises a question of fact for it to determine. In this case it was a question for the jury whether the plaintiff observed that care and caution which an ordinarily prudent person would have observed under the circumstances.

“Any instruction from which the jury might fairly infer that the conduct of the plaintiff which amounts to contributory negligence may become free from negligence because of any act of neglect on the part of defendant is contrary to the doctrine of contributory negligence and for that rea *546 son cannot be upheld. ... It is common knowledge that the traffic upon our highways is so great, involving as it does continual streams of powerful vehicles of many classes proceeding at varying rates of speed and not bound to follow any particular track, that such thoroughfares have become places of danger, where one who is himself driving a motor vehicle and who fails to continually take into account the conduct of others and to anticipate their movements as far as possible is negligent. Such anticipation is demanded without regard to the California Vehicle Act. (Zarzana v. Neve Drug Co., supra,

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 345, 219 Cal. 542, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roller-v-daleys-incorporated-cal-1933.