Zolkover v. Pacific Electric Railway Co.

254 P. 926, 81 Cal. App. 772, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 851
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 18, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3117.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 254 P. 926 (Zolkover v. Pacific Electric Railway 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
Zolkover v. Pacific Electric Railway Co., 254 P. 926, 81 Cal. App. 772, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 851 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Some time between the hours of .5 and 6 o’clock on the evening of November 20, 1922, in the city of Los Angeles, the plaintiff was injured by being run over by one of the trucks of a car of a three-car train, then and there belonging to and being operated by the respondent, Pacific Electric Railway Company, and brought this action against both named defendants to recover damages. Judgment went for the defendants and the plaintiff appeals.

Appellant has not furnished us with any general statement of the facts in this case, but counsel for the respondent, Los Angeles Railway Corporation, has taken pains to set forth a full account of all the incidents and occurrences connected with the injury of the plaintiff, which, by comparing with the testimony, we find to be so accurate as to justify our adopting the same as correctly presenting all the issues involved herein. We will not attempt direct quotation, but will follow the recital of facts therein set forth.

The injury to the plaintiff occurred at the intersection of Main and Seventh Street in the city of Los Angeles, being one of the busiest intersections in said city. Main Street runs northerly and southerly, Seventh Street runs easterly and westerly. Both streets are approximately fifty feet in width, that is, from curb line to curb line. On both streets are the tracks of said railway companies. At the time of the injury, the respondent, Los Angeles Railway Corporation, was operating an electric car running in a northerly direction, while the respondent, Pacific Electric Railway Company, was operating a car running in a southerly direction. Both ears were being operated upon Main Street and at the intersection thereof with Seventh Street. The plaintiff, for something over throe years, had conducted a place of business at No. 332 Main Street, and was entirely familiar with the intersection referred to, and had crossed the same several times daily for a period of three or four years. The crossing of the intersection involved was, at the time of the *775 injury, controlled by traffic signals. This control related, however, only to vehicular traffic, including street-cars.

Semaphores were used for controlling the movement of traffic. When traffic was moving east and west on Seventh Street, the semaphores on the northeast and southwest corners of the intersection displayed at right angles to the flow of traffic a white sign marked “Go,” while the semaphores on the southeast and northwest corners displayed at right angles to the flow of traffic north and south a red sign marked “Stop.” Prior to a change in the direction of traffic, a bell would ring and the semaphore marked “Go” for east and west bound traffic would drop and a “Stop” signal would rise in its place. After an interval of ten seconds, the semaphore marked “Stop” for north and south bound traffic on Main Street would drop and a “Go” signal would be raised, this being the signal for traffic to proceed north and south. The ringing of a bell about ten seconds before a change in the direction of the traffic Was given for the purpose of permitting vehicles and persons thereon moving in the then direction of the traffic allowed time to clear the intersection and, also, as a warning not to enter upon the intersection in the direction of the traffic about to be stopped. At the time in question, the plaintiff was in perfect health, possessed good eyesight and good hearing, was active in body and able to move about freely. The plaintiff, when at the intersection of Main Street and Seventh Street, prior to executing his purpose of crossing Main Street by going over the same in an easterly direction parallel with the south line of Seventh Street, observed that there was standing on the north side of Seventh Street a three-car Pacific Electric train bound south and on the south line of the intersection of Seventh Street standing on Main Street a north-bound Los Angeles car, both waiting for a change in the traffic signals, enabling the former to' move in a southerly direction and the latter to move in a northerly course. The plaintiff, accompanied by one Richard Barnes, started across the intersection in an easterly direction along the south line of Seventh Street, with the conditions existing as just set forth. Our attention has not been called to anything in the record showing that the plaintiff heard the ringing of the bell preceding a change of the semaphore signals, nor have we found anything in the *776 record, nor has anything been called to our attention indicating that the plaintiff before starting to cross the intersection waited, paid any attention to, or endeavored to ascertain whether the preliminary warning bell had been sounded. Without any reference to the preliminary warning bell, the plaintiff, walking along the side of Mr. Barnes, proceeded to the center -of the street, and upon reaching that location observed that the semaphores had been changed, giving the “Stop” signal to traffic moving easterly and westerly on Seventh Street and the “Go” signal to traffic moving northerly and southerly on Main Street. At that instant of time the Los Angeles car, standing on Main Street immediately south of the south line of Seventh Street, sounded its gong or bell, indicating that the car was about to be started northerly, and thereupon the plaintiff and Mr. Barnes stopped in the space between the two car lines, that is, between the tracks on which the Los Angeles car was bound north and the tracks on which the Pacific Electric car was bound south. This space was two feet in the clear of the overhang of the steps on the respective cars and two feet eight inches in the clear of all other portions of the overhang of the respective cars.

It appears from the testimony that after the Los Angeles car had sounded its warning bell it remained standing for some seconds, giving sufficient time for pedestrians to cross the tracks upon which it was standing, in the event they so elected. The plaintiff and Mr. Barnes stopped and remained at the place stated. The motorman of the Los Angeles car observed where the plaintiff was standing and moved his car forward very slowly. The motorman of the Pacific Electric train, upon the signal being given to proceed, immediately started and propelled his train in a southerly direction along Main Street past where the plaintiff and Mr. Barnes were standing. As this train was passing the plaintiff, the plaintiff either stepped backward, or, as stated by Mr. Barnes, swayed backward and was struck by some part of one of the cars of the Pacific Electric train and was thrown under one of the wheels of that train. One arm was injured so as to necessitate amputation. ■ Other minor injuries were also sustained. The testimony of the plaintiff touching this particular time is as follows: “While I was standing there, I knew that the two cars would pass each *777 other with myself between them; I thought I was perfectly safe; I was standing right in the middle; I had seen one other man standing in the same place; I was dressed in an overcoat and heavy suit. I was in the middle, maybe too far there, but I was in the middle; I thought I was safe.” After the Los Angeles ear rang its bell it did not start immediately, but stood still for two or three seconds.

The testimony of Richard Barnes is to the effect that he stood by the side of the plaintiff ten or fifteen seconds after the warning bell was sounded by the Los Angeles ear. This, however, would appear to be too long an estimate of the time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 926, 81 Cal. App. 772, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zolkover-v-pacific-electric-railway-co-calctapp-1927.