Weaver v. Carter

152 P. 323, 28 Cal. App. 241, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 290
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 16, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1340.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 152 P. 323 (Weaver v. Carter) 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
Weaver v. Carter, 152 P. 323, 28 Cal. App. 241, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 290 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

Action for personal injuries. The plaintiff was awarded judgment for the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars upon a verdict returned by the jury in said amount.

The defendant moved for a new trial, which motion was disallowed, and he brings the case to this court on an appeal from the judgment and the order denying his application for a trial de novo.

The complaint fully states the facts (to which due reference by way of a review of the evidence will hereafter be *243 made) constituting the ground of the plaintiff’s claim to damages.

The answer of the defendant denies negligence and sets up contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as the efficient or proximate cause of the accident whereby his injuries were sustained.

The accident occurred on the seventeenth day of June, 1911, at about the hour of 4 o’clock p. m., on a public highway commonly known as the “Stevens Creek Road,” in Santa Clara County. Said road connects at a certain point with what is designated and known as the “Saratoga and Santa Clara” Road, and the junction of said roads is called and known as “Meridan Corners.” Stevens Creek Road passes through a thickly settled community and there is, consequently, always a heavy traffic thereon. Running along said road and on the north side thereof is the track of the Peninsular Railway Company, leaving a space on said road less than twenty-five feet in width for travel by automobiles, bicycles, and other vehicles.

At the time above stated, the plaintiff, who was then a man of approximately sixty-five years of age, was riding a bicycle along and over the Stevens Creek Road, traveling in a westerly direction. When arriving at a point about nine hundred feet west from the junction of said road and the Saratoga and Santa Clara Road, he saw an automobile coming toward and not far distant from him, traveling in an easterly direction, and thereupon, for the purpose of safely passing said automobile, he took the right or north side of the highway, near the track of the said Peninsular Railwajr Company. He continued to travel west along the north side of said road near said track, and, as he was so traveling and approaching the automobile going east on said road, a large automobile owned and driven by the defendant, traveling west on said road and, as the complaint alleges, “at an excessive and unlawful rate of speed, ’ ’ approached the plaintiff from the rear. When the machine traveling east was in the act of passing the plaintiff, the defendant ran his machine over the plaintiff, thereby causing the injuries of which he here complains.

The plaintiff was removed to a sanatarium, where he was attended by a physician, who found him in a semi-conscious condition, and the bones of his right arm severely crushed. Indeed, the doctor testified that ‘‘ the bone was crushed all to *244 pieces and the muscles and ligaments were bady torn; great masses of muscle were torn out entirely and he was suffering from shock and hemorrhage and some small wounds on the head and on the left arm, but the really severe injury was to his right arm. ... I found it necessary to remove a large part of the broken fragments of the humerus of the upper arm, which shortened the arm three inches and it was necessary to wire the broken remains together. . . . He was (otherwise) in rugged health and I found no organic trouble in him in my examination. The mobility of his arm has been impaired; . . . this is a fixed condition; it is much weaker than it would otherwise have been from loss of bone and muscle, and also from the impaired mobility of the elbow joint.”

The above is only a general statement of the facts as they are mainly taken from the complaint.

Two general points for a reversal are urged by the defendant, viz.: 1. That the court below misdirected the jury on matters of law; 2. That the evidence does not support the verdict.

The particular part of the court’s charge of which the defendant complains is the third paragraph of the following instruction :

“I instruct you, that one who violates a rule of law governing the use of a public highway, or to fix how the passing of a vehicle shall be conducted, or the side upon which they shall pass each other is guilty of negligence, and the one so violating any of these rules or attempting to pass a vehicle on a side other than is provided and prescribed by law assumes the burden of his experiment, and is liable for any injury that takes place by reason of, or through such violation of the law, provided, however, that the party who has sustained the injury has not contributed to the injury.
‘‘ The statute is positive and mandatory that an automobile approaching and attempting to pass a vehicle from the rear must pass such vehicle on the left hand side thereof, while the driver of the vehicle to be passed, must, as soon as practicable, turn to the right so as to allow free passage on the left.
“I instruct you, gentlemen of the jury, that if you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff, Philip Weaver, while free from negligence, was riding his bicycle along the Stevens Creek Road, and upon the right hand side thereof, and that the defendant, Carter, overtaking him, attempted to pass *245 him upon his right hand side, and in so attempting to pass said Weaver, collided with him, and thereby injured him, that under such circumstances the said defendant, Carter, was negligent, and is responsible for the injury inflicted by him and that plaintiff under such circumstances is entitled to recover judgment against him for such amount as you may determine in accordance with the rules already announced.”

The foregoing instruction was intended to embrace and declare the law of the road as established by the legislature of 1905 and 1907. (Stats. 1905, p. 816; Stats. 1907, pp. 916, 917, being an act amendatory of the act of 1905.)

Section 4, subdivision 1, of said act provides as follows: “Whenever a person operating a motor vehicle shall meet on a public highway any other person riding or driving a horse or horses or other live stock, or any other vehicles, the person so operating such motor vehicle shall seasonably turn the same to the right of the center of such highway so as to pass without interference. Any such person so operating a motor vehicle shall, on overtaking any such horse, live stock or other vehicle, pass on the left side thereof, and the rider or driver of such horse, live stock or other vehicle shall, as soon as practicable, turn to the right so as to allow free passage on the left. Any such person so operating a motor vehicle shall at the intersection of public highways, keep to the right of the intersection of the centers of such highways when turning to the right and pass to the right of such intersection when turning to the left.”

It is conceded by counsel for the defendant that the first and second paragraphs of the above quoted instruction embody a correct abstract statement of the law regulating the use of the public highways by persons operating motor vehicles under the conditions specified in the above section of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
152 P. 323, 28 Cal. App. 241, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-carter-calctapp-1915.