Vietti v. Hines

292 P. 80, 48 Cal. App. 266, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 352
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2051.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 292 P. 80 (Vietti v. Hines) 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
Vietti v. Hines, 292 P. 80, 48 Cal. App. 266, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 352 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in an action for personal injuries, the cause having been tried by the court without a jury.

*268 On April 16, 1918, plaintiff, a woodcutter, employed by Lamoine Lumber Company, at Lamoine, was visiting in Redding. He went to Redding, he testified, to take a “couple of days’ lay-off.” At about 5 o’clock that evening he received a telegram recalling him to Lamoine. The telegram read: “Lamoine, California, 9:08 A. M. April 16th, 1918. A. Vietti, care of B. Vietti, Redding, California. Come up at once. We found several mistakes in the bill. Cannot wait longer. Andrew Vaconi. 9:30' A. M. ” He then went to the office of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company in Redding, bought a ticket for Lamoine, for which he paid one dollar and forty cents, and boarded the next train leaving Redding, which was train known as No." 14. He sat in the smoking-car, the conductor took up his ticket and gave him the usual “hat-check.” At Kennett, Hurtzig, another employee of the Lamoine Lumber Company, boarded the train bound for Lamoine. At about 11:30 P. M. the train reached Lamoine, which was a “flag station.” The conductor of the train, when he took up plaintiff’s hat-cheek, told him he would have to jump; that he could not stop as he “had a string of cars.” The train slowed to four or five miles an hour, and Hurtzig and the plaintiff started toward the platform of the car for the purpose of alighting. The plaintiff, according to his testimony, said to the conductor that he would not jump; but it appears that Hurtzig alighted while the train was still moving and thereupon and, after having been ordered several times either by the conductor or the brakeman to jump, the plaintiff leaped to the ground. The plaintiff testified, as did also Hurtzig, that the train or the ear in which they rode was, at the time the former alighted, between three and four hundred yards from the station. The plaintiff further testified that, before he attempted to jump from the car and while he was standing on the steps leading to the platform of the car, he heard the noise incident to the pulling of the bell-cord, signaling, as Hurtzig testified, the engineer to speed up. He also testified that he had on a few previous occasions alighted from the same train at Lamoine in the night-time when it was in slow motion, but that, before doing so or attempting to do so, either the conductor or the brakeman would first alight to the ground and have a lighted lantern so that a passenger *269 leaving the train while it was moving could see where to alight on the ground. On the occasion of the accident, however, neither the conductor nor the brakeman left the train, he testified; nor, he further testified, did either have a lighted lantern on the platform to enable a passenger leaving the train to guide himself in making a leap so as to avoid striking some object which might be near the track. In fact, the plaintiff testified, there was no light about the station at all. He said that when he reached the ground he struck a “pebble” or a loose rock and fell to the ground and thus sustained the injuries (a sprained ankle and bruises on and about the face) of which he here complains.

The witness, Hurtzig, testified that the train had gone about twenty feet from the time that he alighted and the time the plaintiff jumped, and that he heard “the air” and the bell-cord pulled, but whether this was done before or after the plaintiff jumped he could not say.

The above embraces in substance a recital of the circumstances under which the injuries complained of were received.

In appellant’s brief it is stated: “That plaintiff was injured is not to be disputed, and there is no contention made that the amount of damages awarded to the plaintiff is excessive, or that any ruling respecting the admission or rejection of testimony is of sufficient importance to urge as a ground for reversal. Nor is it necessary to refer to the witnesses who testified for the defendant. Our contention is that the testimony of the plaintiff shows that he was guilty of contributory negligence that bars recovery by him.”

[1] In the first place, it may be laid down as a settled and indisputable rule that when a carrier of persons for hire sells a ticket entitling, a passenger to ride on its train or other vehicle used for the transportation of passengers.to a specified destination it is the duty of such carrier to see that the passenger is afforded all reasonable means for reaching and alighting at his point of destination with safety to himself. [2] Having sold the plaintiff a ticket to Lamoine, it was the duty of the defendant, upon reaching that point, to have stopped the train for a time sufficient to enable the plaintiff to leave the train without, in doing so, incurring a risk to his personal safety which could not arise or exist *270 under the usual or ordinary conditions existing or peculiar to that particular station; and, in failing to stop its train at Lamoine so as to enable the plaintiff to alight without subjecting him to some risk or danger to his personal safety and compelling him to leave the train while it was in motion, however slow the speed of the train was diminished at that point, the defendant was guilty of the violation of a duty it owed to the plaintiff. Its negligence thus committed must be held to have been the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, unless it could be held, upon a view of the evidence, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, without which the damage would not have occurred, and, we do not think we can justly so hold. Our opinion is rather that, upon the evidence, the question whether the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as would exonerate the defendant from culpable blame for the accident and the injuries received by the plaintiff as a result thereof was one for the court to solve.

It is obviously true, as is said by the supreme court, in Loftus v. Pacific Elec. Co., 166 Cal. 464, 467, [137 Pac. 34], that “ordinarily, the question whether a plaintiff has been guilty of contributory negligence is one of fact for the jury. It becomes a question of law for the decision of the court only where the facts are undisputed, and even then only where, on those facts, reasonable minds can draw -but one conclusion on the issue of contributory negligence. (Herbert v. Southern Pacific R. R. Co., 121 Cal. 227, [53 Pac. 651]; Johnson v. Southern Pac. R. R. Co., 154 Cal. 285, [97 Pac. 520] ; Hoff v. Los Angeles R. Co., 158 Cal. 597, [112 Pac. 53]; Zibbell v. Southern Pacific, 160 Cal. 237, [116 Pac. 513].) ‘It has often been said by this court that it is very rare that a set of circumstances is presented which enables a court to say, as a matter of law, that negligence has been shown. As a general rule, it is a question of fact for the jury. . . . ’ (Seller v. Market St. Ry. Co., 139 Cal. 268, [72 Pac. 1006].) ” [3]

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 80, 48 Cal. App. 266, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vietti-v-hines-calctapp-1920.