Wallis v. Southern Pacific Co.

195 P. 408, 184 Cal. 662, 15 A.L.R. 117, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 614
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9018.
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 195 P. 408 (Wallis v. Southern Pacific 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
Wallis v. Southern Pacific Co., 195 P. 408, 184 Cal. 662, 15 A.L.R. 117, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 614 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, heirs of Thomas Henry Wallis, in an action to recover damages for the latter’s death, caused from his being run into by an engine of one of defendant’s trains.

*663 The accident occurred on the evening of October 16, 1909, at the intersection of Oak Street and First Street, in the city of Oakland. The deceased was driving a lumber wagon, drawn by two horses, southerly on Oak Street. The train was approaching from the east on the tracks of defendant company on First Street. There was no load or bed on the wagon and decedent was seated on what is termed the cinch, about midway between the front and rear wheels. Just as the wagon reached a point where the driver was midway between the rails of the railroad track it was struck by the engine and the driver was killed.

The case was tried before a jury which returned a verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars.

Plaintiffs’ case rests upon allegations of negligence of defendant in running its train at unlawful and excessive speed and in its failure to exercise due care in giving warning of its approach. Defendant, besides denying its own negligence, pleads contributory negligence of the deceased in failing to stop, look, and listen before attempting to cross the track.

That negligence of the defendant in exceeding the speed limit was shown by the evidence and is not seriously disputed. On the defense of contributory negligence there was no direct testimony as to whether or not the decedent took any precautions to ascertain whether the track was clear before driving upon it, but there were circumstances given in evidence which might justify an inference that the decedent did not exercise such precaution.

One of the grounds urged by defendant for a reversal, and the only one upheld by the district court of appeal, is alleged error of the trial court in admitting, over defendant’s objection, testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses that the decedent on other occasions, not only at this crossing but elsewhere, was in the habit of stopping his team and, when necessary, going ahead to the railroad track to ascertain if any train was approaching.

The objection to this testimony was made generally on the grounds that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, but the more specific contention of counsel for defendant was that such evidence of custom or habit to support a presumption of conduct in a "given case was permissible, if at all, only when there was no eye-witness to the fact. The language of counsel in supplementing his general objection was: “If there is evi *664 deuce of any eye-witness then it is not admissible. I think unless there is evidence that there is no eye-witness it would be very doubtful.”

After the court had overruled the objection, counsel for defendant stated: “I want the evidence to go in subject to my objection that it is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and no sufficient foundation has been laid. . . . That is the only point. My theory is that it must first appear there was no eye-witness,. . . it is addressed to that only in this particular, that it has not been shown there was no eye-witness, and it is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial.”

We think it sufficiently appears that defendant’s objection to this evidence was thus limited to the condition that the evidence introduced was inadmissible if there was direct evidence of eye-witnesses to the fact. It was upon this assumption that the ruling of error wras made by the district court of appeal. Accepting this theory of the law, we doubt if the foundation appears in the evidence here to exclude this testimony. No eye-witness testified directly on the subject or made reference to it. Only two witnesses saw the decedent as he approached the crossing. Neither, of these saw him for more than a moment. Mrs. Borba, who lived on Oak Street, a block south of the crossing, opened her door and looked out just as what was probably the crossing whistle of the train sounded at a point shown to be some seven or eight hundred feet east of the crossing. At that time she saw the decedent driving on Oak Street toward the crossing at some point between her house and First Street. She re-entered the house, closed the door, and heard the continued whistle of the engine. J. F. Finn, the engineer of the locomotive, testified that just after he had finished blowing the crossing whistle he saw the heads of the horses coming into his line of vision at a point about ten feet from the north rail of the track at the crossing, and that he thereupon began to sound the warning whistles ; that the team continued toward the track until the collision happened. We do not agree with respondents’ interpretation of the testimony of Mrs. Borba, that she saw decedent just after he was past the intersection of Oak and First Streets. She distinctly states that she saw him on Oak Street between First and Second Streets “right by the red building, ’ ’ which was between these streets. That would *665 leave a considerable space where he was not seen by either witness. It is obvious that an interval elapsed between the moment when Mrs. Borba saw the decedent and when the moving team came into the engineer’s line of vision. There is room for inference, however, that decedent did not stop to look and listen in that brief interim, and yet he might have done so, and there was no eye-witness to testify on that point. The time and place for so stopping would have been as he came into First Street, where he could see up and down the railroad track. He might have just started his team- after an instant’s halt to glance up and down the track, when the engineer first saw the heads of the horses. If ever a cause was entitled to whatever presumption arises from habits of caution, to overcome an inference from adverse circumstantial evidence of negligent conduct, it arises under the facts of this case.

We do not understand that the authorities which uphold the admissibility of this class of testimony only in the absence of direct evidence base the condition of its admission upon an entire absence of other evidence as to collateral facts that may uphold an inference as to what happened, but upon the absence of direct testimony of any eye-witness that the thing did or did not occur. In this case there was no such direct testimony.

The law governing this class of evidence is perplexingly inharmonious. The weight of authority, however, seems to uphold its use under the conditions stated, that there is an absence of satisfactory testimony of eye'-witnesses as to the fact in controversy, while other decisions and authorities consider it legitimate evidence without such condition. This limitation upon the introduction of such testimony seems rather illogical. If the fact of the existence of habits of caution in a given particular has any legitimate evidentiary weight, the party benefited ought to have the advantage of it for whatever it is worth, even against adverse eye-witnesses; and if the testimony of the eye-witnesses is in his favor, it would be at least a harmless cumulation of evidence to permit testimony of his custom or habit.

The only authority in this state directly in point is that of Craven v. Central Pac. R. R. Co., 72 Cal. 345, [13 Pac.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rogers v. State
641 S.W.2d 404 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)
Baron v. Sanger Motor Sales
249 Cal. App. 2d 846 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)
Coleman Engineering Co. v. North American Aviation, Inc.
420 P.2d 713 (California Supreme Court, 1966)
Webb v. Van Noort
239 Cal. App. 2d 472 (California Court of Appeal, 1966)
Brandelius v. City & County of San Francisco
306 P.2d 432 (California Supreme Court, 1957)
Doran v. City & County of San Francisco
283 P.2d 1 (California Supreme Court, 1955)
Dusseldorf v. Teets
209 F.2d 754 (Ninth Circuit, 1954)
Rodabaugh v. Tekus
246 P.2d 663 (California Supreme Court, 1952)
Mahnkey v. Bolger
220 P.2d 824 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
LaPorte v. Houston
199 P.2d 665 (California Supreme Court, 1948)
Mantonya v. Bratlie
199 P.2d 677 (California Supreme Court, 1948)
Rather v. City & County of San Francisco
184 P.2d 727 (California Court of Appeal, 1947)
Folger v. Richfield Oil Corp.
182 P.2d 337 (California Court of Appeal, 1947)
Dalley v. Williams
166 P.2d 595 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
Johnson v. Sacramento Northern Railway
129 P.2d 503 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)
Deere v. Southern Pac. Co.
123 F.2d 438 (Ninth Circuit, 1941)
Johnston v. Brewer
105 P.2d 365 (California Court of Appeal, 1940)
Southern Ry. Co. v. Whaley
98 S.W.2d 1061 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1936)
West v. Southern Ry. Co.
100 S.W.2d 1004 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P. 408, 184 Cal. 662, 15 A.L.R. 117, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallis-v-southern-pacific-co-cal-1921.