Wright v. Los Angeles Railway Corp.

93 P.2d 135, 14 Cal. 2d 168, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 321
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1939
DocketL. A. 17164
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 135 (Wright v. Los Angeles Railway Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Los Angeles Railway Corp., 93 P.2d 135, 14 Cal. 2d 168, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 321 (Cal. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

In this action plaintiff sought to recover a judgment for damages alleged to have been suffered by her when an automobile which she was driving in the city of Huntington Park was struck by a streetcar owned by the defendant railway corporation and operated by defendant Sherman.

It was alleged in the complaint that the proximate cause of the collision was the negligent operation of the streetcar by the defendants. By the answer the charge of negligence was denied and the issue of contributory negligence of plaintiff was specifically raised. At the close of plaintiff’s case, and again at the close of the trial, the defendants’ motions for a nonsuit and for a directed verdict, respectively, were denied. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s *171 favor in the sum of $7,500, and the defendants have appealed from the judgment entered thereon.

At the time of the accident here concerned, there was in effect an ordinance of the City of Huntington Park, by the provisions of which it was made unlawful for any streetcar to be operated at a speed greater than 15 miles per hour in a business or a school district. The accident happened early in the afternoon of October 12, 1936, at the intersection of Pacific Boulevard and Fifty-seventh Street, which latter thoroughfare runs east and west in said city. The district along Pacific Boulevard from Fifty-sixth Street southward to Fifty-seventh Street is a business district; from Fifty-seventh Street to Fifty-eighth Street is a school zone, and there is a “school crossing” sign on the south side of the intersection of Pacific Boulevard and Fifty-seventh Street. On the day of the accident the defendant corporation owned and, through defendant Sherman, was operating an electric streetcar upon its right of way, which extended upon- and along the center of Pacific Boulevard in a northerly and southerly direction. Shortly before the accident happened, the streetcar was being operated in a southerly direction in the block immediately north of the intersection of the boulevard and Fifty-seventh Street. At the same time, plaintiff was operating her automobile in a southerly direction along the west side of Pacific Boulevard, on a portion of the street which runs parallel with the streetcar tracks. When plaintiff reached Fifty-seventh Street she assertedly stopped at the south end of the safety zone, after which she turned her automobile in an easterly direction across the southbound tracks of the electric railway, at which point the collision occurred,—the left side of the automobile having been struck by the streetcar.

The record shows that the evidence was substantially conflicting in each of several respects. The version given by defendant Sherman as to the speed and position of the respective vehicles, and of his acts as well as those of plaintiff, immediately prior to and at the time of the accident, differs in several material respects from the recital of plaintiff in that regard. The former testified that when the streetcar was about half a block north of Fifty-seventh Street he saw the automobile traveling south on Pacific Boulevard midway of a safety zone which was located near the intersection of Fifty-seventh Street; that at that time the street *172 car was traveling at a speed of about 20 miles per hour and that the automobile was moving very slowly; that from the time he first saw the automobile until it reached the intersection he was watching it “to see what move it ivas going to make”;-that plaintiff gave no signal that she was about to make a left turn, and that he “didn’t think she [the plaintiff] was going to whirl right around in front of the street car, . . . which was done”; and that when he observed the automobile on the track in front of the streetcar, he threw off the power and “tried to stop as soon as he could”. He also testified that he rang the bell continuously from the time he first saw the automobile until he reached the intersection, but that he did not slacken the speed of the streetcar from the time he first saw the automobile until the streetcar had reached the intersection where the accident oc-. curred. On the other hand, plaintiff testified as follows: “ . . . when I was about half a block north of 57th street I gave a signal with my left hand to turn. Prom that time I dropped my hand to stop at the intersection. When I stopped my front wheels were about even with the end of the loading zone. ... I shifted into low gear and made a signal for a left-hand turn and looked back alongside the automobile and by that time I had started into the intersection. When I looked back I saw the street car. It hadn’t entered the intersection of 56th [an entire block to the north]. I proceeded into the intersection, making a signal for a left-hand turn, and then I took my hand in and shifted to second gear and then made the left-hand signal and proceeded to make the left-hand turn across the tracks.....I had almost crossed the track and the rear wheels were just about in the center when I heard a bell ring. . . . When I heard the bell I looked around and saw the street ear. It was just a few feet from my automobile. There wasn’t time to do anything” then, as it was just an instant until the streetcar struck the automobile. She also testified that, from the time she stopped until she started to make the left turn across the tracks,—except when she shifted gears of the automobile and looked backward—she was observing a northbound streetcar which was nearing the intersection of Fifty-seventh Street.

There was evidence adduced with respect to the position and speed of the respective vehicles, which in part tended to support the version of the accident as related by de *173 fendant Sherman, as well as evidence which in part supported that given by plaintiff. Two witnesses testified that, while it was traversing the block between Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Streets, the speed of the streetcar was 30 miles an hour,—although, at a former time, one of those witnesses had stated that he had not noticed the speed of the respective vehicles at or about the time of the accident. The testimony of four of the witnesses, as well as that of defendant Sherman, was that the speed of the streetcar was greater than 15 miles per hour. There was also testimony offered by the defendants to the effect that the automobile had been traveling “parallel” with the streetcar at the time it was approximately midway of the block north of the intersection where the collision occurred.

The principal contention of the appellants is that plaintiff was contributorily negligent. Or, otherwise stated, they contend that, at or about the time of the accident, the conduct of plaintiff was not that of an ordinarily prudent person, under the same circumstances. However, it is generally conceded that, on approaching an intersecting street, the duties of a streetcar motorman and those of the driver of an automobile which is about to cross the streetcar tracks at such intersection, are reciprocal and that each is required to approach the intersection with due regard for the rights of the other. (Smith v. Southern Pac. Co., 201 Cal. 57 [255 Pac. 500] ; Shipley v. San Diego Elec. Ry. Co., 106 Cal. App. 659 [289 Pac. 662].) In that regard it was said in the case entitled Aungst v. Central California Traction Co., 115 Cal. App. 113, 116 [1 Pac. (2d) 56]: “ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
93 P.2d 135, 14 Cal. 2d 168, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-los-angeles-railway-corp-cal-1939.