Solko v. Jones

3 P.2d 1028, 117 Cal. App. 372, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 553
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
DocketDocket No. 7960.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 1028 (Solko v. Jones) 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
Solko v. Jones, 3 P.2d 1028, 117 Cal. App. 372, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 553 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tom.

Appeal from judgment of dismissal entered upon the granting of defendant’s motion for a nonsuit in an action to recover damages for negligence proximately causing personal injuries to plaintiff and the death of her husband. The questions presented are stated by appellant as follows: 1. If a husband is killed and his wife, while his passenger, suffers personal injuries in the same automobile collision wherein the husband is guilty of *374 contributory negligence, does Ms said contributory negligence bar her recovery for her own personal injuries? 2. Was plaintiff’s husband guilty of contributory negligence proximately causing the accident ? 3. If so, should the jury here have been permitted to decide whether, as a matter of fact, defendant had the last clear chance of avoiding the injury, and whether he used due care in that behalf ? The questions thus presented will be considered in the same order.

1. It is well established in this state that the contributory negligence of the husband is imputed to his wife, and the wife is consequently barred from any recovery for her injuries. (Basler v. Sacramento Gas & Elec. Co., 158 Cal. 514-518 [Ann. Cas. 1912A, 642, 111 Pac. 530] ; Dunbar v. San Francisco-Oakland T. Rys., 54 Cal. App. 15 [201 Pac. 330]; Giorgetti v. Wollaston, 83 Cal. App. 358 [257 Pac. 109].) In the last cited case, at page 362, it is said: “A right of action for personal injuries to the wife is community property (citing cases) and though as provided by statute she may sue alone . . . , yet if the negligence of her husband proximately contributed to her injuries the right of either or both to recover is barred.” Appellant disputes this statement of the law and argues that, whatever may have been the former rulings, the more recent construction given by the courts to the doctrine of community rights tends to a contrary conclusion. Without detailing appellant’s analytical review of the history of community property law in tMs jurisdiction, we might concede that the tendency of the later statutes and the decisions construing the same have been to lessen the husband’s sole and arbitrary control of the community property, but the older rules as to what constitutes community property have been little altered, and the law remains to the effect that a chose in action such as the one here being considered remains the property of the community. Then, argues appellant, it cannot be disputed that it is a salutary maxim of the law where the reason falls the law falls. The argument proceeds on the theory that the husband being killed, the community automatically was dissolved; that, therefore, there being no community, whatever right existed in the wife must necessarily be her separate property. And, continuing, it being the theory of the law that the husband’s negligence having caused or contributed to the injury of the wife and any damages recoverable therefor being community property, *375 the husband would profit by his own wrong if the wife could recover pecuniary damages, then obviously such theory can find no support in reason if the husband is killed, inasmuch as he cannot profit after his demise. We have thus detailed the contention of appellant on this point, as it seems to be the important feature of the controversy and for the further reason that appellant has presented a persuasive argument, well reasoned and supported by abundant authority. Yet there is one material matter that interrupts the mechanical precision of the approach to the argument. The record before us discloses that the husband was not killed in the accident. It is true that he died as a result of injuries sustained in the said accident and that the interval between the injury and death was but a matter of a few hours.

After the accident had occurred and the events comprising the same had terminated, we find both husband and wife living. We find the wife injured as a result of the negligence of defendant and the contributing negligence of the husband. Therefore, under the established rule, we find a cause of action accruing to the community, which cause of action by reason of the husband’s negligence, is barren and to all intents destroyed. The rule cannot be circumvented through a voluntary conveyance of the community interest by the husband, although such a transfer would in effect tend to overcome the reason often set forth as the sole support of the doctrine. When the law declares that the profits arising from the husband’s negligence shall not enrich the community, it is tantamount to saying that no profit or gain shall so arise, for the reason that if any profit did arise it could not be other than community property. The effect of the law’s imputation is to charge the wife with the negligence of the husband equally with the latter. His death in no degree absolves him from negligence, nor changes the character of his act. That act, if negligent, remains so; and if when committed, it was by imputation of law the act of the wife, it still remains her act, unchanged in character.

To sustain appellant’s contention, we must hold that the right of the wife, her cause of action, arises immediately upon the happening of the event causing her injury, but remains unenforceable and suspended during the life of the husband, but upon his death revives and becomes vested in the wife. When in the instant case the death of the husband followed *376 within a few hours after the accident, the reasoning would have equal force where death resulted within a year. To hold then that for eleven months the wife was chargeable with negligence defeating her cause of action, but that upon the death of the husband she became completely absolved, would bring about a condition not consistent with any theory of law or reason.

Let us suppose a case where an accident happened, due to the unquestioned negligence of the husband contributing with the negligence of a third party; no other questions being involved. The husband receives no injuries at all, but the wife is injured and in dire straits. If the husband then, remorseful over the fact that the condition is at least partially attributable to his negligence, determines self-destruction and executes the plan, we would have a situation compared to the case at bar. The death of the husband, whatever may be the cause, serves only to dissolve the community; it cannot affect the character of property acquired or rights vested prior to his death.

Without further discussion we hold that the death of the husband some few hours after the accident will not suffice to change or abrogate the rule that the negligence of the husband is imputed to the wife. During the hours of his life, after the accident, the husband was tin full possession of all of his legal rights; the fruits of inheritance could attach to him as the result of an ancestor predeceasing him within that time, and in all other respects he would be deemed living. Upon his death the community interest of the wife would become vested and she would become the owner of that portion of the community property allotted to her under the law. This claimed cause of action, denied to the community because of the fault of one of the members thereof, was not vested in the wife prior to the death, nor was it vested in the community. Therefore the wife has never acquired it.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 1028, 117 Cal. App. 372, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solko-v-jones-calctapp-1931.