Schneider v. Market Street Railway Co.

66 P. 734, 134 Cal. 482, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1207
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1901
DocketS.F. No. 2636.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 66 P. 734 (Schneider v. Market Street Railway Co.) 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
Schneider v. Market Street Railway Co., 66 P. 734, 134 Cal. 482, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1207 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

SMITH, C.

Carl Richard Schneider was killed, in this city, at the junction of East and Pacific streets, by one of the defendant’s street-cars, and this suit was brought by the plaintiff, his mother and sole heir, to recover damages for the killing. The case was tried by a jury, who found for the plaintiff in the sum of five thousand dollars, and judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The motion was made on the minutes of the court, and it is objected that “there is nothing in the statement to indicate that a notice of motion was ever given, of if given, as to its contents.” But it is not necessary that the statement should thus indicate. The presumption, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, is, that the notice was duly given, and that the specifications contained in the statement conform to those in the notice. (Pico v. Cohn, 78 Cal. 386, 387, and cases cited; 4 Notes on Cal. Rep. 482.) This rule applies equally, whether the order appealed from was made on a statement of the case or on the minutes of the court. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 659, subds. 3, 4; sec. 661.) The requirements of the latter section that the statement shall contain only “the grounds argued before the court for a new trial” refer to the specifications of grounds mentioned in subdivision 4 of section 659, or such of them as are in fact argued; and when specifications are set out in the statement, it will be presumed, without a formal statement to that effect, that they were contained in the notice,, and that they were in fact argued. In the cases cited by respondent’s counsel (Leonard v. Shaw, 114 Cal. 72, and Sprigg *485 v. Barber, 122 Cal. 574), there were no specifications in the statement.

The points urged by the appellant are, insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and erroneous rulings of the court on questions of evidence, and in its instructions to the jury.

1. The accident occurred about half-past six in the evening. The deceased was crossing East Street, from the southern sidewalk of Pacific, and was killed in crossing the track in front of the car. He was seen momentarily by the motorman as he emerged from the darkness into the stream of light thrown forward by the headlight of the car, and was next seen, on the car being stopped, lying on his face in the street, to the eastward of the track, and opposite or somewhat to the rear of the rear open end of the car, — his feet near the track, his head towards the bay. He was then in an unconscious and dying condition, the result of a fracture of the skull, with contusion and hemorrhage of the brain.

It is argued at length by the appellant’s counsel that “these circumstances make it possible, if they do not lead to the conclusion, that the defendant was killed by slipping and falling upon the pavement without actual contact with the car,” and, in effect, that the jury was not justified in drawing a contrary inference. But the only specification on this point is, that there was no evidence tending to show that deceased “was struck by the car while making an attempt to pass over East Street, at a public crossing,” which, taken in connection with the preceding specification, may be construed as specifying merely that there was no street crossing or public crossing at the place where the accident occurred. It will be unnecessary, therefore, to consider the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the jury in finding that the deceased was in fact struck by the car.

With regard to the defendant’s negligence, the principal charges are that the rate of speed of the car, at the time of the accident, was in excess of the statutory limit of eight miles an hour (Civ. Code, sec. 501), and that no bell was rung or gong sounded on approaching Pacific Street, as required by the municipal ordinance set out in the complaint.

With regard to the rate of speed at which the car was going, the evidence is somewhat meager. There was testimony, on behalf of the plaintiff, that it was going very fast, and accord *486 ing to one of the witnesses, “unusually fast,” and “as fast as [he] ever saw a car going before ”; but none of these witnesses could give the rate of speed. On behalf of the defendant, the motorman and conductor testified that the car was going at the rate of about four miles an hour; but the time consumed in arriving at the place of the accident, from the point of starting, as given by themselves, would indicate a rate of about six and a half miles an hour. The motorman also says that he “stopped the car within fifteen or eighteen feet,” and that it would have required “ no less than between thirty-five and fifty feet to stop a car going full speed,” etc. But, according to his own testimony, the deceased, when first seen, was ten feet in front of the car, which was twenty-eight feet long, and, according to the testimony of one of the witnesses (Anderson), the deceased was found, on the stoppage of the car, about eight feet in rear of its rear end,—thus making the distance passed about forty-six feet, and indicating that the car was going, at least, at the full speed of eight miles per hour. But Anderson —who was familiar with the line — also testifies that “when [the cars] are going fast they can stop in fifteen or twenty or twenty-five feet to take passengers off and on”; from which the inference may be drawn that the car was going at more than full speed, or eight miles an hour; and if such an inference was drawn by the jury, we cannot say they were not justified in making it. (Johnsen v. Oakland etc. Railway, 127 Cal. 610, 611.) Though, possibly, it may be said, as was said by this court in a somewhat similar case, “ that a verdict founded on such speed alone as constituting negligence on the part of appellant could hardly be sustained.” (Driscoll v. Cable Ry. Co., 97 Cal. 564, 565. 1 )

It seems, however, to be an established fact in the case that no bell was rung or gong sounded on the car as it approached the limit of twenty-five feet from Pacific Street, as was required by the ordinance set out in the complaint. This fact is not contested by the appellant, but the contention is, in effect, that the junction of the two streets cannot be regarded as a “ street crossing,” and hence that the ordinance does not apply to it. But this contention, we think, cannot be admitted. The term used in the ordinance, according to its common use, includes all intersections of streets, and equally applies though *487 one of them may terminate at the point of intersection (see Webster’s Dictionary, words “ Cross-’ and “Crossing,” and diagrams under former term); and the reason of the rule applies equally to all street crossings or intersections. For, where one street intersects another, there are always passing along the former, so to speak, two streams of foot-passengers approaching the latter, of which, the one diverges along and the other crosses the street approached; and this is equally true, whether the intersecting street passes beyond the other street or terminates in it. Hence the reason of the rule—which is the protection of foot-passengers crossing the street approached—will equally apply in both cases.

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Bluebook (online)
66 P. 734, 134 Cal. 482, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-market-street-railway-co-cal-1901.