Scalf v. Eicher

53 P.2d 368, 11 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 829
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1935
DocketCiv. 9596
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 368 (Scalf v. Eicher) 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
Scalf v. Eicher, 53 P.2d 368, 11 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 829 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

WARD, J., pro tem.

Leo C. Scalf, an incompetent, by Virginia E. Scalf, his guardian ad litem, brought this action against defendants to recover damages for the death of Leo Howard Scalf, a minor, the son of the incompetent and his guardian ad litem. The transcript of evidence shows the following state of facts: San Leandro Street is a public street running in a general easterly and westerly direction in the city of Oakland. There are no intersecting streets entering San Leandro Street between Eighty-fifth Avenue on the east and Seventy-seventh Avenue on the west for a distance of approximately two thousand feet. There is no accepted sidewalk and no demarkation of sidewalks by curb lines. The width of the street is fifty feet. Thirty feet of the street is surfaced with metal macadam. On each side of the paved portion of the roadway are dirt and graveled shoulders. No place for pedestrians to walk is provided, but the workers in nearby canneries use the improved portion of the highway in going to and from their places of employment.

On the date of the accident the deceased, about fifteen years of age, in company with Joseph Caruso, also a minor, had been gathering firewood in a field near by to San Leandro Street. The boys pulling and shoving a play wagon entered the street and walked along their left side of the road for *48 a distance of about two hundred feet, at which point they crossed the road and proceeded on their right side of the highway on the shoulder thereof for a distance of four hundred feet. There was no light or warning sign attached to the play wagon. It was “dusk or dark or getting dark”. At the same time and place an automobile owned by the defendant Bicher, who was riding therein, and driven by defendant Moseley was proceeding in a westerly direction on the right-hand side of the highway, with headlights on, either fully or with dimmers. The headlights of a passing automobile proceeding in the opposite direction “blinded” the driver of the Bicher car. Just what happened is not clear from the contradictory statements in the evidence except that the Bicher automobile hit the deceased and his companion and proceeded about three hundred feet on the right shoulder of the highway before it came to rest with its right front wheel in a ditch to the north of the shoulder of the road. The minor Caruso was injured, and the Scalf boy died shortly after as a result of the impact. The small wagon was demolished and the firewood scattered on the north shoulder, the paved portion of the road and in ditches near by. There was glass and debris found indicating that the impact had taken place on the dirt shoulder on the north side. It was stipulated that the accident occurred outside of a business or residence district. There is no dispute concerning any fact which is essential to the determination of the major questions here presented, namely, was the deceased guilty of negligence which contributed proximately to the accident, and if so, was the act or omission of the deceased contributory negligence as a matter of law. We find no contention in appellants ’ briefs that the driver of the car was not negligent, and we therefore proceed to a consideration of this case upon the assumption that the driver of the car was negligent. The evidence was ample to justify the conclusion that defendant Moseley was the agent of the defendant Bicher, and if this ease should be retried the pleadings should be amended to conform to the proof.

Section 150% of the California Vehicle Act (Stats. 1929, chap. 253, see. 66, p. 546) provides: “It shall be unlawful for any pedestrian to walk along and upon any highway outside of a business or residence district otherwise than close to his left-hand edge of the highway. ’ ’ Section 21 of the same act defines a highway as follows: “Every highway, road, *49 street, alley, lane, court, place, trail, drive, bridge, viaduct or trestle laid out or erected as such by the public or dedicated or abandoned to the public, or intended or used by or for the general public, except such portions thereof as are used or prepared for use by pedestrians as sidewalks.” Connected with the part of San Leandro Street referred to in the pleadings and in the evidence, there was no sidewalk and no portion of the highway “prepared for use by pedestrians as sidewalks”. A pedestrian and a driver of a vehicle have equal rights to the use of a highway, subject to the exercise of due care and caution and in accordance with the provisions of any statute or ordinance. The locus of the accident in this case was outside of a business or residence district and it was incumbent therefore upon the deceased to walk “close to his left-hand edge of the highway”. Appellants contend that “edge of the highway” means the extreme side of the portion of the area of land dedicated as a highway. The topography of San Leandro Street near the scene of the accident,, as described by witnesses, is sufficient refutation of this contention. The construction given to the meaning of words and phrases used in ever changing, and necessarily changing, traffic rules should be reasonable and practical. The evidence reveals the fact that the extreme border lines of this highway are covered with grass and weeds, and on the north side there is a ditch. The photographs of the scene of the accident, made a part of the transcript on appeal, indicate that walking in the ditch or through weeds would be not only inconvenient and unsuitable, but rather hazardous, particularly to one pulling or shoving a small wagon loaded with firewood.

Section 150% of the California Vehicle Act is applicable to highways outside of a business or residence district. When read in conjunction with section 21 of the same act, pedestrians must use a portion of the highway prepared for the use of pedestrians. If there is no pathway or lane or sidewalk so used, then the pedestrian may walk on his left-hand edge of the portion of the highway used by vehicles. The following citations submitted by appellants are not in point. In Corcoran v. Pacific Auto Stages, Inc., 116 Cal. App. 35, 38 [2 Pac. (2d) 225], the court found the evidence disclosed that the accident occurred in a business or residence district, and section 150% of the California Vehicle Act was not applicable. Catton v. Kearns, 123 Cal. App. 94, was a *50 “crossing” ease in which the court held at page 97 [10 Pac. (2d) 1036, 1037] : “The requirement that a pedestrian proceed close to his left-hand edge of the highway’ is not very well applicable to a person crossing the road” and reversed the judgment for the reason that an instruction embodying section 150% of the California Vehicle Act was improper in view of the pleadings and evidence.

Respondent contends that section 150% of the California Vehicle Act applies only to the paved, improved or main traveled part of the highway, and particularly so within the limits of a city where no means of walking is provided other than the dirt shoulder. We cannot approve of this theory. Section 150% is not limited to districts within or without city limits. It simply provides that it must be ‘ outside of'a business or residence district”. The word “highway” as used in various statutes and ordinances may have a meaning somewhat different, depending upon the purpose. of the provision of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 368, 11 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scalf-v-eicher-calctapp-1935.