Waite v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.

132 P.2d 311, 56 Cal. App. 2d 191, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 191
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1942
DocketCiv. 6669
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 311 (Waite v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.) 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
Waite v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 132 P.2d 311, 56 Cal. App. 2d 191, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 191 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiffs, following a trial by jury. The plaintiff, Helen Ruth Waite, was awarded judgment for $3,000 damages, and her mother, Mary B. Waite, was awarded the sum of $290, as special damages. In denying a motion for new trial, the court reduced the awards to plaintiffs to the sums of $2,000 and $234.14, respectively. This appeal is presented on a bill of exceptions.

Damages were awarded to the plaintiff, Helen Ruth Waite, as compensation for injuries sustained to her spinal column, as a result of falling in the aisleway of a street car. The damages awarded to the mother covered expenses for medical care in the treatment of her daughter’s injuries.

The accident in question which caused the injuries to plaintiff occurred on January 9, 1940, at approximately 8:30 in the morning. On that occasion, plaintiff, Helen Waite, who was fifteen years of age, was on her way to school and had boarded the street car at Twenty-fifth and J Streets in the city of Sacramento, with the intention of proceeding thereon to Ninth and J Streets, at which point she would alight and continue therefrom by foot to school.

This street car on which Helen Waite was a passenger was operated by one man whose station was in the front of the *193 car. At the rear of the car there was provided an additional exit which is operated automatically by the weight of the passenger as he or she steps upon what is called the “treadle pedal. ’ ’ This operation opens the rear door and the passenger may then alight.

At a point approximately midway between Tenth and Ninth Streets as the street car proceeded westerly, Helen Waite gave the buzzer signal to stop, arose from her seat and proceeded toward the rear of the car. The occurrence of the accident is related by her in the following language:

“After the car crossed 10th Street the seat occupied by me had no other occupant. After the car crossed 10th Street and'was approximately in the middle of the block I rang the buzzer to indicate my desire to get off the car. At that time the car was going ‘just the normal rate of speed that a street ear usually travels.’ When I rang the buzzer I then stood up to get out and took a couple of steps out to the aisle, and turned around to go to the back of the ear. At that time I had a binder and about four books and my lunch and my purse and I was carrying them in both arms. When I turned around to go back ‘I took a couple of short steps, then the street car gave a quick and rather sudden jerk, and my feet just went out from under me and I fell.’ ‘It was just a quick sudden jerk, and my feet just went out from under me. My feet went towards the back of the car and I fell in a sitting position. I fell awfully hard. My head didn’t hit the floor. My seat, my tailbone, came in contact with the floor or aisle-way. My feet went in front of me and I was sitting in a straight position. I remained there about a second. Then I got up and tried to pick up my books as best I could and went to the back of the car and got off. This jerk took place about the length of two street cars from the corner. The car continued on to the corner before it came to a complete stop. The car was at the corner when I got off the rear end. I stood on the plate at the end of the street car after I had picked myself up, the door opened and then I got down. I didn’t notice any pain when I was getting off the street car but after I got down on the ground and started to walk a little bit there was a pain in the lower part of my back. The street car had gone on. I went on to school at 9th and G Streets. The accident took place around 8:30 o’clock. . .- . The floor in the aisleway of the street car on this occasion *194 was just plank flooring, just a smooth surface; well, it was wet from people tracking the water in.’ It was in that condition when the accident happened.”

On cross-examination Miss Helen Waite gave the following testimony:

“The floor of the street car was wet, as I would expect on that kind of a rainy day. It was the usual wet floor, or damp floor, that I would expect in a street car from people getting on or off. There was nothing unusual about it. That condition made the floor slippery. I wasn’t holding on to the grips on the back of the seats at the time I was walking down the aisle of the street car just before I fell; I had my arms all full of books; I wasn’t holding on to the uprights of. the street car or anything else because I wasn’t close enough to, and I couldn’t have held on anyway because I had my arms full of books. I am as certain that I had my arms full of books as I am that the street car jerked. . . . Q. Now, this jerk that occurred, Helen, that you say occurred at the time you fell, that was just the usual jerk, wasn’t it? A. It wasn’t exactly the usual, no, because it was quick and sudden. Q. Well, it was a jerk that you had often observed on street ears before, was it not? A. While I was sitting, but not such a quick and abrupt jerk. Q. You never observed a jerk like that before while you were a passenger on a street car, whether you were sitting or standing? A. I had experienced jerks, but not so abruptly. Q. You experienced some kind of jerks on other occasions while you were sitting in the car, did you not? A. Yes, sir. Q. And it was what you would consider a usual jerk on a street car, was it not? A. Yes, but it was not abruptly. Q. What do you mean by not abruptly ? A. Well, it was just a quick sudden jerk. ’ ’

This plaintiff also testified on cross-examination “that it was the combination of the jerk and the damp floor that caused me to fall.”

The motorman operating defendant’s street car at the time of the accident died sometime prior to the trial of this case. No witness to the accident other than the plaintiff, Helen Waite, was produced. There was no attempt on the part of the defendant to establish any theory relating to the cause of the accident.

The appellant contends that the judgment of the trial court must be reversed for lack of proof of negligence on the *195 part of defendant; because contributing negligence as a matter of law was proved by plaintiff’s own testimony; and for errors of law committed by the trial court in giving and in refusing to give certain instructions.

In support of the contention that the evidence fails to disclose any proof of negligence of the defendant it is submitted that the plaintiff’s testimony describing her fall and the movement of the street car proved no more than the ordinary or usual action of a street car in slowing down and that, under the authorities, proof of a “violent” or “unusual” jerk of a street car is necessary to establish negligent operation thereof. In this connection it is urged that prejudicial error was committed in the giving of an instruction which permitted the jury to infer negligence from proof of injury to the plaintiff caused by “some movement” of the street ear no matter whether slight or ordinary rather than to require proof of “some unusual movement.” It is apparent from the language employed in this particular instruction that the court was applying the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur to the facts as presented in this case. The issues raised by defendant in that regard are therefore material in the determination of this appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 311, 56 Cal. App. 2d 191, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waite-v-pacific-gas-electric-co-calctapp-1942.