Withey v. Hammond Lumber Co.

35 P.2d 1080, 140 Cal. App. 587, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1080
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 11, 1934
DocketCiv. No. 8723
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 1080 (Withey v. Hammond Lumber Co.) 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
Withey v. Hammond Lumber Co., 35 P.2d 1080, 140 Cal. App. 587, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1080 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

WILLIS, J., pro tem.

This action was brought by plaintiff against Hammond Lumber Company, a corporation, J. W. MacDonald and C. W. Driver, individually and doing business under the firm name of MacDonald and Driver, and John Doe. The latter appeared and answered in the person of L. J. McCormick, an employee of Hammond Lumber Company. The complaint in its essentials alleged that while plaintiff was walking on a sidewalk the defendants negligently drove and operated a large lumber truck in and upon the sidewalk, striking plaintiff and causing the injuries complained of and for which damages are sought. In addition to the general allegation of negligence as to all defendants, it is alleged that defendants gave no notice or warning to plaintiff, or other pedestrians using the sidewalk, that the truck would be moved. Defendants Hammond Lumber Company and L. J. McCormick answered separately, each denying the allegations of negligence and pleading contributory negligence. Defendants MacDonald and Driver answered jointly, likewise putting in issue the charge of negligence on their part and pleading contributory negligence. At the trial the same counsel appeared for Hammond Lumber Company and McCormick, and MacDonald and Driver were jointly represented by other counsel. A trial was had before a jury and a verdict against all defendants above named was returned for the sum of $15,000, on which judgment was entered. Separate motions for new trial were made by the lumber company and McCormick together, and by MacDonald and Driver, which were denied. Separate appeals from the judgment were thereupon taken by the two groups of defendants, and the record presented consists of a transcript on appeal containing the judgment-roll, notices of appeal and a single bill of exceptions, which appellants and respondent stipulate may be used by each appellant on the separate appeals.

The epitomized essential facts which are disclosed by the record are as follows: On October 30, 1930, a building was in course of construction on. the west side of Broadway between Sixth and Seventh Streets, in the city of Los Angeles. Appellants MacDonald and Driver were the general contractors constructing such building. A wall or partition had been erected across the front of the premises on the [591]*591west part of the sidewalk, with a large door or gate about midway thereof, to permit the entrance to the premises by persons and vehicles. In connection with such wall the outer part of the sidewalk was fenced off, with an overhead canopy or ceiling and with barriers on the street side along the curb, leaving an opening opposite the gate making a passageway or tunnel about four feet wide through and on which pedestrians passed back and forth along that side of Broadway. A short time before 10:25 o’clock A. M. of that day respondent passed along this passageway going south, made purchases in a near-by store and, at the time mentioned, returned going north through the passageway along with other pedestrians. As he approached the part opposite the gate he saw a large empty lumber truck of appellant Hammond Lumber Company standing across the walk, its front end in the street and its dual rear wheels approximately in the center of the sidewalk; the body, which extended some six feet to the rear of the rear axle, projecting about two feet beyond the gate and into the premises. He looked into the cab of the truck and saw no driver in it. He then proceeded to the rear of the south side thereof, around its rear and then turned along the north side of the truck, coming back on the walk when he met other pedestrians who were approaching the truck to pass it. Respondent stopped at a point on the north side of the vehicle, with his right foot on a line in front of the rear wheel and his back or side slightly in advance of an iron roller on the truck, which projected from the frame about three inches beyond the outer line of the rear wheels. While in this position the truck started forward, the rear wheel ran upon respondent’s right foot, the iron roller struck his back or side and he fell, suffering an injured foot and a fracture of his right upper leg bone.

Appellant McCormick, an employee of the lumber company, had delivered a load of lumber on this truck a short time before the accident in question, by backing his truck through the gate and dumping the lumber within the premises. He had then driven the empty • vehicle through the opened gate to the point where respondent saw it standing, brought it to a stop, applied the brakes and, leaving the engine running, climbed down from the cab on its left or north side to gather up ropes trailing behind, with [592]*592which the load had previously been secured. He passed around the front end of the truck and, having gathered and placed the ropes on the truck on the south side thereof, returned around the front of the machine, climbed into the cab on its north side and prepared to start forward. He first looked back to the rear on the left or north side, and saw people standing on each side of the truck but saw no one near it at that time. He then heard a man in the street, with a whistle, who said, “Are you all ready?” to which HcCormick said, “Yes”, whereupon the former blew his whistle and stopped traffic on Broadway, allowing McCormick to go forward. On hearing an outcry he stopped his truck after going only six or eight feet, and observed respondent on the walk near the gutter, injured.

In addition to these undisputed facts the following testimony was given:

Called by plaintiff under section 2055, Code of Civil Procedure, McCormick said: “The man that swung a flag was for MacDonald and Driver; he asked me if I was all ready and I said ‘yes’, and he blew his whistle and stopped traffic and I started.” He also testified: “This man who told me to come ahead was the flagman they had there. . . . There were quite a few automobiles and streetcars on the street at that time, and I was watching those at the time I started, but there was nothing to concentrate my attention out in the street at the time I released my clutch. . . . There was a car coming there, but he had stopped them; the flagman had stopped them. ... I had delivered lumber at this place several times before and this man that told me to come ahead in the street had been there before and had given me 'instructions of that kind before. . . . When I got out to roll up the rope I didn’t see Mr. Withey, the plaintiff in this action. I looked back just a second or so before I started the truck and there were people on each side of the sidewalk that I saw.”

Mrs. Addie Lee testified that she was on the sidewalk going south and was standing by the railing on the north side of the truck when she first saw respondent standing in front of her, to her right; that she had to pause because the truck was in the way and was trying to get through, and people were in the way; that “there were no guards there on the pedestrian walk nor was there any noise or [593]*593warning given of this truck moving”. She also testified: “When I first saw Mr. Withey he was not close to the body of the truck; the body extended. . . . The first thing I saw of Mr. Withey was when he was almost directly in front of me and on the same side of the track that I was on.” Miss Joyce Lee testified she was standing beside Mrs. Addie Lee, her mother, and saw Mr. Withey there just in front of them, facing north, and that then the truck started. “There didn’t seem to be any warning given; it happened so sudden I didn’t notice anyone there by the truck who made any statements that the truck was going to move or anything of that sort.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 1080, 140 Cal. App. 587, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withey-v-hammond-lumber-co-calctapp-1934.