Shaver v. United Parcel Service

266 P. 606, 90 Cal. App. 764, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6163.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 266 P. 606 (Shaver v. United Parcel Service) 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
Shaver v. United Parcel Service, 266 P. 606, 90 Cal. App. 764, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from the verdict of a jury and the judgment of the court awarding $15,000 damages for the death of respondents’ intestate, caused by the alleged negligence of appellants in driving their Ford truck into a loaded runaway trailer which had rolled from a gravel bunker adjacent to the highway, into Cromwell Avenue in Los Angeles County. At the time of the accident the decedent was engaged in trying to stop the trailer.

For grounds of reversal the appellants contend that (1) the judgment is not supported by the evidence, (2) that the *767 testimony fails to show negligence on their part, (3) that the evidence affirmatively establishes contributory negligence on the part of the deceased, and (4) that the court erred in the admission of testimony, in giving and refusing certain instructions and in commenting on the weight of evidence to which an expert witness is entitled.

Cromwell Avenue is a paved street thirty-eight feet wide, extending east and west along the base of the Hollywood hills. A six-foot cement sidewalk borders this avenue on the north, and is elevated above the level of the street about six inches. On the north side of this highway, at a point opposite the place where the accident occurred, the land slopes gradually upward to a gravel pit and sand bunkers owned by William Kerr, which are situated twenty feet from the upper edge of the sidewalk. The soil of the driveway leading to these bunkers consists of loose eroded shale or deteriorated granite. Opposite this driveway the sidewalk was covered with timbers. A plank apron furnished the means of descent from the elevation of the walk to the level of the street. West from the point where the accident occurred, two streets join Cromwell Avenue from the south, but do not extend beyond it. The nearest street to the west is Observatory Avenue, which is thirty feet distant, and Commonwealth Avenue is three hundred feet beyond. Cromwell Avenue, upon which the accident occurred, is perfectly straight in this locality and ascends with a considerable grade from Commonwealth Avenue to the point where the collision occurred. 'The view from Commonwealth Avenue to the bunkers and the street below is clear and unobstructed.

On February 2, 1924, at about 9 o’clock in the forenoon, the deceased and one Burke were engaged in loading an automobile trailer with gravel at these bunkers. For this purpose the trailer was backed against the bunker, and gravel was deposited in the box by means of a chute which extended half the length of the vehicle, thus loading the front part first, after which the trailer was moved forward in order to load the rear end. The driveway, where the trailer stood, descended slightly to the level of the sidewalk. In spite of this slight grade the trailer would usually stand stationary without blocking the wheels. But because the weight and force of the gravel in the process of loading *768 would sometimes start the trailer forward, the wheels were blocked by placing a piece of planking three inches thick and a foot in length upon the ground in front of a rear wheel. At the time of the accident Mr. Burke stood in the trailer-box distributing the gravel as it was deposited from the chute. The deceased was engaged outside upon the ground. When the front end of the box had been filled, according to custom, the plank which blocked the rear wheel was kicked forward two or three feet to permit the machine to roll away from the bunker so as to load the rear end. Upon this occasion, however, the block failed to stop the car. The witness Nemmo testified: “ . . . the ground was soft, and the block failed to stop the trailer.” The weight of the partially loaded car crushed the block into the soil and it rolled slowly on into the street. Upon observing that the block failed to stop the car, the deceased ran ahead of it and attempted to force the end of the tongue which protruded ahead of the car into the earth with his foot. Failing in this effort, standing upon the tongue, he reached for the brake lever at the left side of the box, which he applied with all his strength. While the speed of the car was greatly checked, it nevertheless continued to move forward no faster than a man could walk, and ran into and across Cromwell Avenue at right angles.

About the time this trailer started on its course for the highway, the appellant Faulds drove a Ford truck up Commonwealth Avenue and turned into Cromwell Avenue within plain view of the scene above described not more than three hundred and fifty feet away. He knew of the presence of the bunkers. The runaway trailer was sixteen feet in length and the body was painted red. There was no traffic upon this highway, and nothing to obstruct a clear view of the trailer as it slowly ran across the pathway of the approaching truck. In spite of this evident danger the appellant Faulds drove his ear up this grade to the point of impact at a rate of speed variously estimated at from twenty to thirty-five miles an hour. As he reached a point thirty or forty feet from the point of collision his car was seen to turn first sharply to his left as though he were intending to pass behind the trailer, then he appeared to speed up and turn to the right, with the evident, intent of dashing ahead of the trailer. No horn or other warning of his ap *769 proach was given, and there is no evidence that the deceased even knew of his danger.

Mr. Burke, who held his position in the trailer, testified:

“Mr. Shaver first stood with both feet on the trailer tongue, trying to push the tongue into the dirt, pulling the brake at the same time to stop it. . . . When he saw he wasn’t going to make it that way, he took one foot off the trailer ... so as to get more pull—more leverage. . . . The truck kept coming on. When the (defendants’) truck got to the east side of the center of the street (Observatory avenue) it made a noticeable turn to the left, . . . then it made a turn to the right again, and then straightened its course out. It looked as if the truck slowed down and then speeded up again, and it looked to me as if the driver of the truck tried to get in front of the trailer; and there was not room. . . . Mr. Shaver was standing, at the time of the impact, with his left foot on the trailer tongue and his right foot on the ground walking backward slowly. . . . Mr. Shaver was wedged in between the Ford and the trailer. The Ford had run over the trailer tongue.” The appellant Faulds testified: “From Commonwealth east to Observatory I was driving uphill, and continued to drive uphill until the time of the accident. ... I did not see the bunker, but I knew it was there. I did not see the trailer at all until the time of the impact.” In attempting to dash through between the south curbing of Cromwell Avenue and the approaching trailer, it is quite evident the Ford truck struck the protruding tongue of the trailer and knocked the deceased from his position on the tongue, wedging him in between the trailer and the truck. . Both machines stopped. The tongue of the trailer extended between the front and the rear wheels of the truck, which was jammed against the south curbing of the street. The trailer had to be shoved back to release the body of the deceased, which then fell to the pavement. He was taken to the emergency hospital and soon died from the effect of the injuries which he had sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
266 P. 606, 90 Cal. App. 764, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaver-v-united-parcel-service-calctapp-1928.