Sunseri v. Dime Taxi Corp.

135 P.2d 654, 57 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 452
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1943
DocketCiv. 13710
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 P.2d 654 (Sunseri v. Dime Taxi Corp.) 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
Sunseri v. Dime Taxi Corp., 135 P.2d 654, 57 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 452 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

WOOD (PARKER), J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants, rendered upon a verdict, in an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, a pedestrian, as a result of being struck by a taxicab operated by defendants.

There are two defendants in this action, the Dime Taxi Corporation, a corporation, and F. J. Burns, owners of the taxicab. The taxicab driver was not included as a defendant in the amended complaint.

Plaintiff contends the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict.

The following facts were uncontradicted: At the time of the accident, on March 1, 1941, about 11 p. m., the plaintiff, his wife, sister and brother-in-law intended to go to a bowling alley at 7113 Pacific Boulevard, Huntington Park. It was not raining at the time of the accident, but it had been raining during that day and water covering a space about 4 feet in width was running in the street gutter next to the curb in front of the bowling alley. They went in an automobile, operated by plaintiff, into a driveway near that address and stopped at a place in the driveway where it crossed a public sidewalk. All of the occupants of the automobile except plaintiff alighted therefrom at the place where it stopped on the sidewalk. Plaintiff then backed the automobile into the street and parked it at the curb. While he was returning to the place where his passengers had alighted, he was struck by defendants’ taxicab. Pacific Boulevard was about 100 feet wide and extended north and south. The bowling alley was on the west side of the boulevard. Streetcar tracks were on each side and near the center, of Pacific Boulevard. An employee of defendants, who was driving defendants’ taxicab in a northerly direction on Pacific Boulevard east of the center of the boulevard, turned the taxicab to the left and proceeded west toward the driveway south of the bowling alley. Several cars were parked at the west curb of Pacific Boulevard in the vicinity of the bowling alley. The street and driveway were well lighted and the windshield of the taxicab was clear. Adjoining the bowling alley building on the south side there were 3 business buildings. South of those buildings there was a driveway to a parking lot in the rear of those *929 buildings. The driveway was about the width of an automobile, and was a continuation of a driveway that commenced at the west curb of Pacific Boulevard and extended across the public sidewalk which was in front of said buildings. In other words, there was a driveway, south of the bowling alley, extending east and west from Pacific Boulevard across the public sidewalk into a parking lot at the rear of the bowling alley and the other buildings. The defendants had a taxicab parking station in the parking lot. Adjoining the bowling alley building on the north' side there was a business building. North of that building there was another driveway. The fronts of the buildings referred to were about equi-distant from the street curb. The public sidewalk, which was cement, extended from the fronts of the buildings to the street curb.

Plaintiff testified, in substance as follows: Plaintiff backed the automobile out of the driveway and parked it at an angle to the curb (which was the proper way to park at that place), in the first parking space north of and about 4 feet from that driveway. As parked, the left front door of the automobile was farther from the curb than the right front door. In order to avoid stepping in the water in the gutter, plaintiff alighted from the left front door, walked on his tiptoes in the street next to the water in the gutter, in a southerly direction toward the driveway, looking for a place to cross over the water and go upon the sidewalk. While walking toward the driveway, he was conversing with his brother-in-law, LoPorto, and “exchanging words” with his wife and sister who had started to walk north toward the bowling alley. He could not see down the street; he “just didn’t look.” He could see down one side of the street but he “just wasn’t looking down there at all.” He saw a big open space and ears toward Florence Avenue (which was south of the bowling alley). He did not look to see whether there were any northbound cars in the vicinity of the driveway. He paid no attention as to whether there were any northbound cars in the vicinity of that driveway. He looked but did not see any cars. He looked while he was facing south but did not see any car coming toward him. At the entrance of the driveway, he stepped over the water onto the driveway in one step, and then onto the sidewalk in another step. When he stepped on the sidewalk, he was struck from the rear by defendants’ taxicab. He was struck below his knees while in *930 the act of taking his second step. He had one foot on the sloping part of the driveway and one foot on the level part of the sidewalk when he was struck. He was on the flat portion of the sidewalk when he was struck. He stepped over the water, not into it, but his toes “just about touched the water.” He did not jump, but stepped into the water about 1 foot and then stepped a “good 3 feet” over it onto the driveway. He fell on his arms and rolled over westerly when he was hit. He was knocked flat on the sidewalk and was under the taxicab up to his hips, but the taxicab backed up immediately. He was stunned when he was struck, but when he came to and “turned around and looked,” the bumper of the taxicab was close to the curbline. He had no discussion with anyone at the scene of the accident, but he heard a few mumbling words after he came to, to the effect that he was hit when he was in the street and was knocked 50 feet upon the sidewalk.

Plaintiff’s brother-in-law, LoPorto, testified in substance as follows: He saw plaintiff park his ear and walk back about 5 feet to the driveway. He did not remember whether plaintiff looked in the direction from which the taxicab was coming, but he (LoPorto) saw the cab make the left turn on the streetcar tracks in the middle of the street just as plaintiff was stepping over the water. He watched it come toward plaintiff, who was facing LoPorto (LoPorto was on the sidewalk, facing the street). When he first saw the taxicab it was in the middle of the street, and plaintiff was on the sidewalk. He first saw the taxicab when it was “running into the driveway” and plaintiff was “laid down on the sidewalk.” He first saw the taxicab when it was “back about 5 feet,” after he saw plaintiff. He first saw the taxicab when its lights came toward him. He first saw the taxicab when it was facing north and it “all at once” turned to the west. The only thing he remembered was when the taxicab struck plaintiff and then backed up. He had no conversation with the police officers at the scene of the accident, and he did not tell them that plaintiff had attempted to jump over the water. He called the officers’ attention to plaintiff’s clothes, which were all dry except the toe of his shoe. The taxicab driver told the officers he knocked plaintiff 50 feet, and he (the taxicab driver) told the witness he hit plaintiff in the street.

Plaintiff’s sister testified in substance as follows: She and plaintiff’s wife had started to walk on the sidewalk toward the entrance to the bowling alley (which was in a northerly *931 direction from the driveway), and that plaintiff was on the sidewalk when she first saw him after he had parked his automobile.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P.2d 654, 57 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunseri-v-dime-taxi-corp-calctapp-1943.