Woodall v. Wayne Steffner Productions, Inc.

201 Cal. App. 2d 800, 20 Cal. Rptr. 572, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2661
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1962
DocketCiv. 25488
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 2d 800 (Woodall v. Wayne Steffner Productions, 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
Woodall v. Wayne Steffner Productions, Inc., 201 Cal. App. 2d 800, 20 Cal. Rptr. 572, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2661 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

ASHBURN, J.

Defendants Wayne Steffner Productions, Inc., and Jerome Welo 1 appeal from judgment for plaintiff based on a verdict for $135,000 which was reduced to $70,000 on motion for new trial. The action is one for damages for personal injuries.

Plaintiff had a stunt in which he was lifted over water while suspended by and sitting on the framework of a kite which he had constructed. This he had done often. In March 1959, he made a deal with defendant corporation to come from his Cleveland home to the Los Angeles area and for a consideration of $500 to do the same act, known as “The Human Kite,” over land, being drawn by an automobile instead of a boat. It was to be a sequence for a television production entitled “You Asked For It.” Briefly, the setup was this: He stood on roller skates with the kite in position, it was tied to the rear axle of an automobile by a 150 foot rope; the auto was to start slowly and increase its speed to 27-30 miles an hour, at which time the kite would take to the air with plaintiff sitting in it. His experience had been such that he was able to control all features of the flight except forward speed; on that he had to rely on the operator of the boat or automobile; it was imperative that the speed be reduced as soon as the kite became airborne; the object of this is to stop the *804 upward climb, when that happens the kite goes forward and can be maneuvered successfully; if the take-off speed is maintained the wind in the back will override the forward speed and cause the kite to dive. Plaintiff further explained: ‘1 Once the kite gets up in her flying position, whether it is 50 feet, 75 feet or 100 feet, wherever the kite levels off in this position here (indicating) which is her regular flight position, . . . say a gust of wind come along, or the car has a tendency to be two miles over the speed, I can rock up on my bars here and bring the kite into the wind and that automatically creates a brake on the kite, it automatically will slow down the automobile to bring it down to the given speed. In speed boats with 30 horsepower motors I can rock on the kite and bring the boat almost to a standstill just by braking the kite into the wind.” But, when 75 feet up in the air “if you don’t make a perfect flight it is curtains.” Though plaintiff had made but one exhibition flight over land, he had found in 10 or 11 trial flights that the land job was steadier than the one over water. He had one expert driver whom he used for the land flight, one Mannyings. When making the deal with Mr. Chamberlin (television producer for defendant corporation) plaintiff said his main requirement in a driver was that he had been on stunts of that nature before. Asked if it was absolutely necessary for his own driver to come to California he said, “I knew my kite and I could take care of the kite if the man on the ground will listen to instructions, if he was a qualified driver. So at that he said ‘We have one of the best stunt drivers in Hollywood, ’ ... in fact better than my drivers back in Cleveland and I said ‘Well, in that case, it would be all right to use your drivers. ’ . . . Q. Was there any discussion in the second conversation again about the qualifications of the driver ? A. Yes, we went over that again and he had contacted the drivers that would be used on the program and again he assured me, I reminded him that the man would have to be a top qualified driver and able to listen to orders when given to him, and what not to do. Q. He again assured you, you say? A. Yes.” Likewise, Don Henderson (defendant’s 2 director-cameraman) “assured me that the drivers they had were qualified drivers.” So plaintiff left his own driver at home.

Soon after his arrival in Los Angeles on March 22, 1959, one Hochman drove plaintiff from his hotel to the drag strip *805 where the stunt was to be put on. Hochman said he was to be plaintiff’s driver but when plaintiff discovered he had been driving with his emergency brake partially on he refused to have Hochman. So Welo was assigned by defendant to drive in the exhibition flight. Plaintiff gave Welo explicit and repeated instructions as to speed, signals, etc., and Welo was told to slow the ear after reaching a speed of 27-30 miles; he agreed to do so. Plaintiff’s last word to Welo before the flight was, “Remember, now, don’t go over 30 miles an hour,” to which Welo agreed. Welo himself testified by deposition: “I have never represented myself to Mr. Woodall or anybody else as being a driver because I am not.” In fact Welo never held himself out to Henderson as a stunt driver, had never been used as such by defendant, but had been assigned to this stunt notwithstanding the assurances previously given to plaintiff.

On the occasion in question, according to plaintiff, Welo started too slowly, was given a signal to go faster and was supposed to accelerate at once; the kite jumped along and did not take off; then Welo gave a quick surge forward and the kite rocketed up. Plaintiff started giving the wave-off signal (for an emergency stop); the kite reversed itself, but plaintiff still felt a forward motion, the kite began to fall and he could no longer control it. They were jerked along the ground and plaintiff could feel the rope taut and could feel the forward motion. His estimate was that the car got up to 45 miles.

Welo testified: “Q. Do you recall anything that Mr. Wood-all told you with respect to the importance of slowing down after a certain point when he took to the air? A. Yes, I know all that. Q. You know all that? A. Yes. Q. You accelerated, though, is that correct ? A. No, I did not. Q. Well, did you slow down when he got into the air? A. Did I slow down? Q. Did you slow the speed of the car down when he got in the air? A. I stopped immediately. Q. How far into the air did he get then? A. I would say 70, 75, maybe 80 feet. I am not sure. Q. While he was getting 70, 75 or 80 feet in the air, during that period from the time he left the ground until he got 75 feet in the air, did you slow down any before you made an immediate stop? A. Look, fellow. There wasn’t time, it happened so fast.” “I said we had a prearranged signal but it happened so fast that I never got the signal. Q. Then you didn’t see any signal; is that right? A. That is right.” “Q. You were the driver on that day, weren’t you? A. I was the *806 driver, if you want to call it that, hut I am looking backwards and he [Carlson] is watching the speedometer and everything else. Q. Who is holding the wheel? A. Pardon? Q. Who is holding the wheel? A. I don’t remember.”

The kite turned over on plaintiff and he was seriously injured. He began to yell, “Too fast, too fast, I told him too fast. ’ ’ A boy who was about five feet from plaintiff when on the ground heard him, less than a minute after the accident, repeating, “I told him not to go too fast.” Welo said the car got up to 33-34 miles. Kenneth Carlson, who was in the tow car with Welo assigned to the job of watching the speedometer, testified that when plaintiff was lying on the ground he heard him say, “Too fast” and “My leg, my leg.”

An expert witness, William D.

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Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 2d 800, 20 Cal. Rptr. 572, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodall-v-wayne-steffner-productions-inc-calctapp-1962.