Thompson v. Los Angeles & San Diego Beach Railway Co.

134 P. 709, 165 Cal. 748, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 479
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 3143.
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 134 P. 709 (Thompson v. Los Angeles & San Diego Beach 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
Thompson v. Los Angeles & San Diego Beach Railway Co., 134 P. 709, 165 Cal. 748, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 479 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

In this action brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained through the negligence of the defendant, a verdict for three thousand dollars was returned in favor of plaintiff. The defendant appeals from the ensuing judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The defendant owns and operates a line of railway from the center of the more densely populated part of the city of San Diego to La Jolla, a distance of some fourteen miles. The entire line is within the city limits of San Diego. About four miles from the starting point a wagon-road crosses the track near the settlement known as Old Town. On the nine *750 teenth day of July, 1909, the plaintiff was one of six passengers who were riding in an automobile run for hire, she and those with her having engaged passage for a sight seeing tour to and from certain points of interest in and about San Diego. The automobile was proceeding northerly from the center of the city toward La Jolla. As it came upon the crossing above referred to, near Old Town, it was struck by the defendant’s ear which was proceeding northerly on the track toward La Jolla. The impact overturned the automobile, and the plaintiff suffered the injuries which form the basis of this action.

The defendant’s car was about fifty-five feet in length, and was operated by means of a gasoline motor. The complaint alleged that the collision was caused by the defendant’s careless and negligent management and operation of the said motor car. The answer denied this allegation and set up contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part.

The appellant claims that the court below erred in rulings on the admission and rejection of evidence, in denying its motion for a nonsuit, as well as in instructing the jury, and urges, further, that the findings, implied in the general verdict, that the defendant was negligent and that the plaintiff was not, are without support in the evidence. For a proper understanding of the points made, so far as they will require discussion here, it seems well to begin with the consideration of the evidence afid its sufficiency to sustain the verdict.

At the point where the collision occurred, the general direction of the defendant’s track was northerly. Before it crossed the wagon-road, the track entered upon a slight curve to the west. Beginning about four or five hundred feet from the crossing, the wagon-road ran approximately parallel to the track, at a distance of from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet easterly therefrom. At about one hundred and fifty feet from the crossing, the wagon-road turned northwesterly, and continued in this direction until it crossed the track at an oblique angle. The track passed through a cut south of the crossing, but this cut ended some three hundred and fifty feet before the crossing was reached. The track was on a downgrade for a distance of eight hundred feet or thereabouts until it came to some thirty-five feet from the crossing, when it became level and so continued until after pass *751 ing the wagon-road. For the last three hundred feet of this distance the fall is one-half foot in the hundred, making a one-half per cent grade. The wagon-road, too, falls slightly until it comes to within about one hundred feet of the crossing, when, after running level for a short distance, it rises a trifle over one foot in the last fifty feet to the track crossing. From the time the track emerges from the cut until the crossing is reached, a car upon the track is open to the view of any one upon the parallel stretch of road, although the track itself cannot be seen. So, too, a vehicle on this part of the road may readily be seen from the car upon the track opposite.

Upon the day in question, the automobile and the motor car were proceeding northerly upon their respective paths. The automobile was running down hill at a rate of ten or twelve miles an hour, and was a little ahead of the motor car. The latter was going at about the same rate, or perhaps somewhat faster, the car being permitted to “coast,” or run by gravity, no power being applied. At the lowest point in the wagon-road was a stretch of sand. The chauffeur of the automobile, which had also been “coasting,” put on his power to carry him across the sand. There still remained a level piece, and here the chauffeur threw out his clutch, andqgffias carried by momentum, gradually slowing down, until tiMítl, cached the foot of the last rise leading to the track. A3fc|nis point, he again threw in his clutch, applying the power, and thus went up the ascent and on to the track, where the auto^bile was struck by the approaching motor car. According to the testimony of the chauffeur, and of the surviving five of his six passengers, not one of them had seen the motor car or had heard any bell or whistle giving warning of its approach. On the other hand a number of witnesses, who were not impeached in any way, testified that both bell and whistle had been sounded repeatedly as the motor car was approaching the crossing. The motorman of defendant’s car saw the automobile when it was two hundred and fifty feet from the crossing. He testified that he put a little pressure on the air-brakes at that point. The automobile, he said, continued at the same speed until it came to the rise near the crossing. It then checked its speed, leading him to think it was going to stop, but it started up again and kept right on to the track. *752 When it started up at the point referred to, the motorman reversed his engine, and put on his emergency brake. He was then only fifty feet from the crossing, and the ear could not be stopped in that distance. It is true that there was some impeachment of the motorman’s testimony that he had put on his brakes when he was fifty feet from the crossing. Testimony was given to show that, on a prior occasion, he had said that he put on the emergency brake when his car hit the automobile. But his former statements had no force as independent evidence of what he had actually done at the time of the accident. They could have no effect beyond that of neutralizing what he said at the trial. Since the burden of proving negligence was on the plaintiff, she was bound to prove that the motorman failed to apply his brakes when he was fifty feet from the crossing, if she relied on such failure as an element of negligence.

But we think it must be held that there was enough in the evidence to justify the jury in finding that the motorman was negligent in not giving proper warning, by bell or whistle, of his approach. It is true that the only evidence that he did not give such warning was negative, consisting of the statements of the people in the automobile that they heard no signal. But, itihey were so situated, as they undoubtedly were, as to i^^Hbeen able to hear a bell or whistle sounded from the mo-^Bcar, their failure to hear is some evidence that no such sigMlwas given. (1 Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 664; Stotler v. Chicago & A. Ry. Co., 200 Mo. 107, [98 S. W. 509]; Cotton v. Willmar etc. Ry. Co., 99 Minn. 366, [116 Am. St. Rep. 422, 9 Ann. Cas. 935, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.), 643, 109 N. W. 835].) That there was positive testimony to the contrary does not conclusively establish that a warning was given. It creates merely a conflict of testimony, which is finally resolved, so far as this court is concerned, by the verdict of the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 709, 165 Cal. 748, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-los-angeles-san-diego-beach-railway-co-cal-1913.