White v. Kretz Bros.

10 P.2d 198, 122 Cal. App. 197, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1119
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1932
DocketDocket No. 920.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 198 (White v. Kretz Bros.) 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
White v. Kretz Bros., 10 P.2d 198, 122 Cal. App. 197, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1119 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Respondents recovered judgment in the sum of |20,060 for damages suffered by both of them in an automobile collision which occurred on June 30, 1929, in Imperial County on the Ocean-to-Ocean Highway connecting the cities of Brawley and Los Angeles. Appellants made a motion for new trial which was denied. They have prosecuted this appeal from the judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury.

Appellants urge the following grounds upon which they rely for a reversal of the judgment: First, that the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict; second, that the damages awarded are excessive; third, that the trial court erred in submitting the case to a jury at the request of respondents and over the objection of appellants.

The evidence offered for the respondents discloses that they were husband and wife, both forty-eight years of age at the time of the trial; that with their daughter, Freda, they were traveling easterly on the Ocean-to-Ocean Highway in a Hupmobile sedan which was being driven by R. E. White at a speed of, about thirty-five miles per hour and upon his right-hand side of the road which traversed rolling ground at the place of the accident. As respondents were ascending a slight rise in the road they met a truck and trailer belonging to the appellants which was being driven by Henry Kretz acting for himself and the other appellants. Instead of being on his own right-hand side of the road, Henry Kretz was in the center of it and his left wheels not more than three feet northerly from the southerly edge of the pavement. White turned his car sharply to his right to avoid a collision with the truck. At the time of the impact the right wheels of his car were about three feet south of the southerly edge of the pavement and the left wheels were on the pavement about a foot northerly from its southerly edge. Kretz swerved his truck to its right and the trailer whipped further to the southerly edge of the road, its rear axle catching the left front end of the *200 frame of the White automobile causing the collision in which both respondents were injured. A statement of these facts is sufficient to demonstrate the negligence of appellants, which was the proximate cause of the accident, and the lack of contributory negligence on the part of respondents.

Appellants maintain that the case was improperly tried before a jury and that this court can review the evidence and weigh it under the provisions of section 956a of the Code of Civil Procedure, make findings and enter judgment in their favor. This contention was decided adversely to them in the cases of Tupman v. Haberkern, 208 Cal. 256 [280 Pac. 970], Davis v. Chipman, 210 Cal. 609 [293 Pac. 40], and Isenberg v. Sherman, 212 Cal. 454 [298 Pac. 1004, 299 Pac. 528].

Both respondents were injured in the collision. R. E. White had his breastbone fractured and was bruised and shaken up and suffered pain and could not work for some time. Mrs. White was very seriously injured as is shown by the following quotation from a summary of the testimony of one of her attending physicians printed in the supplement to the appellants’ brief. “I know the plaintiff Levar White. She came to me July 8, 1929. She was very highly swelled and it was practically impossible for her to sleep. I examined her mouth and found on the right side the mandible was fractured, that would be about the location of the first or second molar teeth had there been any present. She also had a fracture on the left side. It was what you would call a compound multiple fracture. You could touch the bone where it was protruding through. She at that time was suffering excruciating pain. I had an X-ray that shows the fractures. There were no teeth in her mouth. It was an ‘edentulous’ case, but there was one unerupted tooth. The treatment in cases in which there are no teeth is a problem in itself because you have no teeth in the mouth for guidance, nor have you anything to anchor to; so that the problem resolved itself into some means of support for the portion that would drop and some means of pressure for that part that would leave its normal position and rise to a point where it would not make a union; and, so, in order to handle this, it was necessary that a head cap, with projecting wires, with a hammock to carry *201 the broken chin—the mandible forms the chin, and this chin support is placed under with screw buckles was gently brought into place until the ridge inside the mouth felt even; and the next day, upon the same apparatus, was added a wire with what we call a ‘stent’, which is a plastic, flexible material when hot and very rigid when cold; and with the stent, on wiring, pressure was made against the ramus of the jaw, the ramus being the perpendicular part but in fractures of this type is pulled upward and forward out of place. This pressure then was made upon the ramus to hold backwards and downwards. The reason that an apparatus of this kind is used upon a multiple fracture in a case of no teeth in the mouth is because the only other alternative is to cut down on the bone and bore holes in it and set wires through it, and then you have to splint that. I removed that splint August 28th; and on September 6th I did the plastic operation on her neck. On the right side, where there was an open wound which had been closed in the skin, and the muscles had been allowed to pull apart so that it had a very ugly sear, and I removed the scarred area and lifted up the skin and went in and joined the muscles of the neck together and then replaced the skin over them to make her neck smoother. While she was taking treatment she stayed at the Mission hotel, across the street from the office, so I could have her close to adjust this splint. In adjusting a fracture of that kind that has gone for days, which you see there, she had adhesions and a certain union will take place that has to be readjusted, and it is a very, very painful thing. This woman was not in any condition to take a general anaesthetic; and if she had taken one she would have been nauseated and thrown the jaw out of position. Consequently I had her go to that little hotel so that I would have her two or three times a day. They would bring her back and forth and I would set the screws up and work on it until I got it in as straight a position as possible then I let her go home. Mr. Eckhardt: I will state for the record and for the information of counsel that we expect to show that since the accident Mrs. White has not been able to wear false teeth. Q. Doctor, assuming that the proof is made that I have just indicated in my statement, what would you say with reference to the injury as being or not being a cause of Mrs. White’s not being able *202 to wear false teeth. Mr. Hickcox: Object to that on the ground it is not a proper hypothetical question and it is not laying a sufficient foundation for the question. The Court: Objection overruled. A. Well, I think there is no question but that the injury is the cause of that condition, because in the breaking of the mandible, particularly at the point that this has occurred on the right, there is nearly always some overlapping of the ramus with the mandible.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 198, 122 Cal. App. 197, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-kretz-bros-calctapp-1932.