Wistrom v. Redlick Bros., Inc.

92 P. 1048, 6 Cal. App. 671, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 373.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 P. 1048 (Wistrom v. Redlick Bros., Inc.) 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
Wistrom v. Redlick Bros., Inc., 92 P. 1048, 6 Cal. App. 671, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 79 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

*673 BURNETT, J.

The following statement of the facts, following closely that made by appellant, is substantially correct, and is sufficient for the purposes of this appeal:

On the twenty-third day of May, 1903, plaintiff was riding on his bicycle along the westerly side of K street in the city of Fresno, traveling in a southerly direction. At the same time a delivery wagon was being driven along the same street in a northerly direction, the wagon and team belonging to the appellant and being driven by one of its employees. The plaintiff was riding with ordinary speed. Appellant’s employee thought he was near the place where he was to deliver some merchandise and turned to the left, but when he had reached practically the edge of the sidewalk he observed that he was in the wrong block and turned from the left toward the right side of the street. The plaintiff observed him turning to the left, and in order to avoid an accident he also turned to the left at about the same moment that the horse was turned toward the center of the street, on the right of the driver. A collision occurred and plaintiff was quite seriously hurt.

1. The evidence is sufficient to support the verdict of the jury. Appellant says: “It appears to be assumed by respondent that it constituted negligence on the part of defendant’s employee to turn in by mistake to the place where he did not desire to go and thence to turn back toward the center of the street.” That assumption would not be very creditable to the intelligence of anyone urging it. However, we do not understand respondent to take any such position. His contention is that the driver in turning his horse as stated failed to exercise ordinary care and prudence. His negligence consisted principally in not looking to see if anyone were approaching. The driver himself declares: “I wheeled over as soon as I saw it was wrong; I didn’t see this man [plaintiff] at all.”

It is so manifest as not to require argument nor authority that it was the duty of the driver to proceed slowly and carefully and to be on the alert lest he come into collision with others. The plaintiff was where he had a right to be; he was on a well-defined bicycle path on the extreme right of the highway or public street near the sidewalk. The driver had swung across this path and the law charged him with the *674 duty of careful observation of the situation in view of the probability that travelers would be coming in an opposite direction. Under such circumstances, inattention and apparent indifference to the approach of others and to the danger of collision are not to be excused, according to the law of negligence as generally expounded and accepted. (Wik berg v. Olsen Co., 138 Cal. 480, [71 Pac. 511] ; Palmer v. Barker, 11 Me. 338; Fales v. Dearborn, 1 Pick. (Mass.) 345; Robinson v. Western Pacific R. R. Co., 48 Cal. 421.) It was not a wanton injury, but the driver was thoughtless, and he did not exercise ordinary care, the care that ordinarily prudent persons would exercise under similar conditions, and therefore his employer is held responsible for the damage done in consequence of his want of care.

2. Appellant complains of this instruction given by the court: “A statute of the state provides that where vehicles meet the drivers of each must turn seasonably to the right of the center of the highway so as to pass without interference.” The instruction constitutes a part of section 2931 of the Political Code. It is contended that it has no application to the facts of this case, but that its purpose is to present a rule “whereby vehicles meeting upon a street or highway could pass each other in uniform manner.” But the “uniform manner” is designed to prevent interference and to avoid such accidents as occurred in the case at bar. Since it is a general regulation and sound in principle, it seems proper that it should be given in a case like this where two vehicles "meet and they are not turned “so as to pass without interference.” It was probably more favorable to defendant than to plaintiff, for the reason that the evidence shows that immediately before the accident the former had turned to the right and the latter to the left. That the rule is applicable to bicycles as well as to other vehicles is held in Diehl v. Roberts, 134 Cal. 164, [66 Pac. 202], There was no ilanger of the jury misapplying the rule to the condition of delivery of goods upon the right or left side of the street, as seems to be apprehended by appellant, because the court covered that contingency by another instruction that “a person may lawfully pass on the left side of the highway or across it for the purpose of turning up to a house or store, but it is his duty in passing from one side of the road to the other *675 to use reasonable care to avoid injuring other travelers upon the highway.”

3. The seventh and eighth instructions are somewhat mildly assailed by appellant. The only objection to the former is that it ignores the facts. No fault is found with it as an abstract proposition. It is clear that the objection is not tenable, as the instruction is in harmony with the facts as testified to by plaintiff. That a different theory may also find support in the evidence is no valid ground of objection as the instruction is hypothetical and pertinent.

As to the eighth instruction appellant makes the suggestion that it is misleading. But his argument is based upon the evidence and inferences most favorable to defendant’s theory of the case. It is really the same objection as that made to the preceding instruction and is equally untenable.

The brunt of appellant’s attack, however, is directed against instruction number 10, which is as follows: “In an action for injuries alleged to have been caused through the negligence of the defendant it is sufficient for the plaintiff to show, in the first instance, that the injury resulted from the negligence of the defendant, and need not show a want of contributory negligence in himself. Contributory negligence is an affirmative defense to be established by the defendant; and such contributory negligence must be shown by the defendant, by a preponderance of the evidence, to have been the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury.”

The general doctrine of the instruction has been indorsed more than once by the supreme court. In Smith v. Occidental etc. Steamship Co., 99 Cal. 468, [34 Pac. 85], the court said through Mr. Justice Harrison: “In this state, in accordance with the weight of authority as well as with the principles upon which the rule rests, it is established that it is sufficient for a plaintiff to show, in the first instance, that the injuries resulted from the negligence of the defendants.” (Citing Nehrbas v. Central Pacific R. R. Co., 62 Cal. 320; MacDougall v. Central R. R. Co., 63 Cal. 431; Magee v. North Pacific C. R. R. Co., 78 Cal. 430, [12 Am. St. Rep. 69, 21 Am St. Rep. 114].) And in Schneider v. Market St. Ry. Co., 134 Cal. 487, [66 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P. 1048, 6 Cal. App. 671, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wistrom-v-redlick-bros-inc-calctapp-1907.