Wilson v. Foley

309 P.2d 97, 149 Cal. App. 2d 726, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2091
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1957
DocketCiv. 21912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 97 (Wilson v. Foley) 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
Wilson v. Foley, 309 P.2d 97, 149 Cal. App. 2d 726, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2091 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment, after verdict, in an action arising from the collision of a fast-moving tractor hauling two semi-trailers, and a stationary automobile.

The appeal is grounded upon the claims that:

(a) No substantial evidence that negligence on the part of defendant Foley contributed to the happening of the accident;

(b) Error in instructing the jury that it was a question of fact as to whether or not the paved shoulder was a part of the main traveled portion of the highway;

(c) Error in refusing to admit certain expert testimony as to the speed of the tractor and trailers at the time of impact;

(d) Error in failing to instruct that looking and not seeing, or failure to look, is negligence;

(e) Plaintiffs’ decedent truck driver was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

Sufficient Evidence

The accident occurred seven and one-fourth miles north of Santa Barbara on Highway 101. It was an early morning in April; the weather was foggy; normal visibility was materially reduced. One McLeod who had been driving his sedan southward took aboard a hitch-hiking sailor; thereafter he ran out of gas and stopped. At the point where McLeod stopped, the highway consisted of two lanes 11 feet wide on each side of the white center line, and 8-foot paved shoulders extending out from each side thereof. The paved *729 shoulder was of a composition and texture different from that of the main traveled portion 1 of the highway. Having parked his car parallel to the highway, but half on the paved shoulder and half on the dirt shoulder, he left both headlights and tail lights burning and joined the sailor in flagging down traffic for the purpose of obtaining gasoline.

Soon thereafter, Foley, accompanied by one Sheridan, arrived from the north in a foreign-built vehicle and came to a stop at a point from 20 to 40 feet ahead of McLeod’s sedan. The exact location of the foreign vehicle on the highway after it had come to a standing position was the subject of conflicting testimony. Mr. Foley having suffered retrograde amnesia in the subsequent collision was unable to testify. The only other surviving eyewitnesses were Sheridan and McLeod. They testified that the Foley car was parked about two car-lengths ahead of the McLeod car and at a slight angle headed to the right, or west, with the right front wheel and about half of the right side off the paved shoulder and on the dirt, while the left rear wheel stood about 4 feet east of the outside edge of the paved shoulder. After Foley parked, he was accosted by the sailor who asked for a ride to get gasoline. On receiving an affirmative reply, the sailor entered the Foley vehicle. McLeod returned to his car, reduced the headlights to parking lights, turned on the interior lights and left the tail lights burning. Just as McLeod entered the Foley machine, its rear end was struck by a tractor pulling two loaded semi-trailers, property of Rainville Trucking Company, driven by Bari Wilson, husband and father of respondents. The sailor was killed and Wilson died from his resulting injuries.

The witness Haven, also driving a truck south, arrived while the dust of the Wilson crash was still in the air. He testified that McLeod told him the Foley vehicle was “setting in the highway” and pointed to the middle of it. Also, Haven observed gouge marks in the main traveled portion where McLeod pointed. There was expert testimony that these gouge marks were made by certain portions of the rear of Foley’s machine, and photographs showed that its rear end was demolished. It was pushed forward and turned around clockwise, coming to rest off the right paved shoulder 77 feet and 7 inches distant from the first gouge mark on the pavement. The truck proceeded south and ran into a culvert abutment west of the highway and came to rest with the *730 tractor and one trailer in the ditch. The second trailer was stopped south of the culvert, coining to rest on its side and headed north. The distance from the first gouge mark to the abutment was 158 feet, 8 inches. Haven testified that when he arrived, the Foley vehicle was approximately 70 feet south and west of the right front of McLeod’s car on the dirt shoulder.

There is a conflict of evidence with respect to the point of impact. This conflict arises not only from the physical evidence of the gouge and tire marks on the pavement as against the testimony of the only two eyewitnesses, but also from the conflicting expert testimony with respect to the meaning of the physical evidence. It is established that there were two sets of tire marks starting with the gouges. One set turned right toward the spot where the foreign vehicle rested, and the other set led to the culvert and the truck. There were no gouges on the paved shoulder and there were no tire marks north of the gouges on either the paved shoulder or the main traveled portion. There was opinion testimony that the point of impact was 5 or 10 feet north of the most northerly gouge mark. The gouge marks were just a little south of McLeod’s car, according to Haven. When Haven arrived, he found a crumpled piece of chrome lying by one of the gouge marks and threw it off the road. Also, he saw dirt lying “just behind the skid marks to just past the gouges.” It was dirt “like you would get off underneath your car if you bump it or something, it falls on the pavement.” Photographs of the foreign vehicle show that its rear end took the full force of the blow almost direct. Mr. Harper, an expert witness for respondents, testified that, based on measurements of the gouges and the rear under-structures of the foreign vehicle, it was his opinion that certain of the gouges had been made by its rear spring hangers.

In view of the foregoing evidence and drawing all reasonably favorable inferences from it, we conclude that there was substantial evidence upon which the jury found Foley guilty of negligence proximately causing the accident. In fact, without any expert testimony, but merely from a study of the photographs of the gouges, tire marks and resting places of the vehicles, the jury reasonably inferred that at the time of impact some portion of the rear of the foreign vehicle was protruding or resting upon part of the main trav *731 eled portion of the highway in violation of section 582 2 of the Vehicle Code.

But appellants argue that the physical evidence is rebutted by the eyewitness testimony of McLeod and Sheridan and by the opinion of their expert witness, Lynch, who opined that the gouge marks were made by the truck. At the most, this merely creates a conflict in the evidence which the jury resolved against appellants and is binding on appeal. The jury may have disbelieved Sheridan and McLeod by reason of bias and interest. Sheridan was a longtime friend of Foley and an occupant of his vehicle, and he testified that it was parked about 60 feet ahead of McLeod’s car, part on the paved shoulder and part on the dirt, at an angle headed more nearly to the south.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 97, 149 Cal. App. 2d 726, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-foley-calctapp-1957.