Szopieray v. West Berkeley Express & Draying Co.

227 P. 720, 194 Cal. 106, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 217
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1924
DocketS. F. No. 10402.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 227 P. 720 (Szopieray v. West Berkeley Express & Draying 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
Szopieray v. West Berkeley Express & Draying Co., 227 P. 720, 194 Cal. 106, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 217 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

*108 LAWLOR, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries to a minor, alleged to have been caused by a truck heavily laden and driven by horses passing over the child’s left leg, crushing it and rendering amputation necessary. The complaint was demurred to and an amended complaint filed. Issue was joined on the facts of the accident, contributory negligence was pleaded, and the answer further alleged that the parents of the minor “are guilty of negligence in allowing said child of such tender years to be alone upon said public street.” When the plaintiff rested a motion for nonsuit was interposed and granted. The plaintiff appeals.

1. Appellant claims the court erred in granting the motion for nonsuit. We quote the specified grounds of the motion: “We move for a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff does not show that the defendants, or either of them, were guilty of any kind of negligence, either in the handling of this team or in doing any affirmative act, or in omitting to do any act, the^.duty of doing which rested upon them or either of them. vWe move for a nonsuit on the ground that the evidence does not show that by any act, either of negligence, or otherwise, of these defendants, or either of them that an injury was inflicted upon or received by this child. We again move on the ground that the evidence is entirely silent as to how or in what way this child was injured. We invoke the principle of law where it is not shown how the accident happened the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show that the defendant was guilty of negligence. The plaintiff fails to show that the defendant was guilty of negligence, not only by no preponderance of evidence but by any evidence at all. And that we claim is the situation in this case. There is no testimony, no eye-witness saw this accident, so there is no scintilla of evidence here of any kind showing how the accident occurred. And, in order to fasten any negligence upon the defendant it must be shown by a preponderance of the evidence that by some act or omission or commission he was negligent. These are the grounds upon which we move for a nonsuit.”

It was said in Grummet v. Fresno Glazed Cement Pipe Co., 181 Cal. 509 [185 Pac. 388] : “The law governing motions for nonsuit is well settled in this state. In Marron *109 v. Marron, 19 Cal. App. 328 [125 Pac. 914], it was said: ‘A motion for nonsuit assumes as true every fact which the evidence, and presumptions fairly deducible therefrom, tend to prove, and which was essential to entitle the plaintiff to recover. (Estate of Arnold, 147 Cal. 583 [82 Pac. 252].) On such motion the evidence must be taken most strongly against the defendant. Contradictory evidence must be disregarded (In re Daly, 15 Cal. App. 329 [114 Pac. 787]), and the motion denied if there is any substantial evidence tending to prove plaintiff’s case without passing on the sufficiency of such evidence. (Zilmer v. Gerichten, 111 Cal. 73 [43 Pac. 408]; Vermont Co. v. Declez, 135 Cal. 579 [87 Am. St. Rep. 143, 56 L. R. A. 728, 67 Pac. 1057].) The rules as to a nonsuit are the same, whether the trial is by the court or by a jury. (Freese v. Hibernia S. & L. Soc., 139 Cal. 394 [73 Pac. 172].)' ”

In substance the testimony is as follows: At about 9:30 A. M. on September 14, 1917, the plaintiff, a child of three years of age, with the knowledge of its mother, left its home, two hundred feet from the northeast corner of Addison and Eighth Streets in the city of Berkeley, to go to the house of his aunt who lived on the northwest corner of said streets, distant from the Szopieray residence about two hundred feet. Mrs. L. T. Wilson, a witness for appellant, on returning from market saw the child sitting on the sidewalk leaning against the fence opposite the horses attached to the truck. She entered her house and after busying herself for about five minutes looked out of the window and saw him playing at the left hind wheel; he v?as playing “by rubbing Ms fingers along the spokes of the rear left wheel.” About one-third of the truck was visible to her. She left the window and hearing a scream she walked across to the window and saw the boy sitting on the street about four feet behind the wagon, with a man supporting him. At no time did she observe any driver on, about or near the wagon. According to this witness the boy was not bleeding but there was blood on the street in front of him but not where he was sitting. She saw an automobile in that vicinity. Emil Turpin, called as a witness on behalf of the appellant, testified that while at work in his yard he noticed a truck loaded with boxes of grapes, to which two horses were attached, standing on Eighth Street north of Addison *110 Street and that the team was not tied. He saw someone taking a bunch of grapes from the truck and about half an hour later, hearing a cry, he ran to the truck and saw the teamster holding the child in his arms. He also testified that “The little boy was about two feet behind the left hind wheel, back of the hind wheel.” He said he did not see the truck move but “I had seen the truck before that on that day, prior to that time, standing on Addison Street. ’ ’ Prank Sabine, a witness called on behalf of appellant, testified that while at work in the Ramos coal-yard he saw the truck standing on Eighth Street; that it was there about three-quarters of an hour during which time the driver was standing inside the coal-yard; that someone hollered “Whoa” and everyone rushed outside; that there were other horses in the coal-yard at the time, and that he was up in the loft and when he got out the child had been taken to the hospital. The doctor, Julian J. Benton, a witness for appellant, testified that “The thigh, the muscles of the thigh were crushed and the macadam ground into the muscles, into the leg itself, and the tibia torn from its articulation, I mean the fibula torn from its articulation with the tibia. That means the joint of the small bone of the leg with the large bone at the knee, tom asunder. . . . Q.. What did you find was -the injury with reference to the muscular structure of the leg between the knee and the foot? A. Crushed and torn from the bones entirely; the calf of the leg, what is commonly called the calf of the leg. The skin was torn from the shin bone. Of course, there are no muscles there; the skin was torn away. The skin together with the calf, the muscles composing the calf was torn away' from the bones entirely. The whole thing was crushed entirely, entirely severed from the bone, from the bony structure, not only that, but the 'macadam ground into the muscles and the skin. It was absolutely necessary to amputate it, because it was impossible to get healing without. It was impossible to get healing in the first place, and in the second place gangrene would have set in within twenty-four or forty-eight hours with the accompanying absorption of what is commonly called blood poison later, and besides that he would never have got any cover whatsoever to the part, the skin was so mutilated and the muscular attachment being torn from the leg and the macadam gone into it, amputation was absolutely *111 necessary to save the boy. . . . Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P. 720, 194 Cal. 106, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szopieray-v-west-berkeley-express-draying-co-cal-1924.