Reinders v. Olsen
Reinders v. Olsen
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff, by his guardian, brought action against defendant to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in a collision between a motorcycle upon which plaintiff was riding and an automobile operated by defendant. The principal undisputed facts appear to be as follows: At about 8 o’clock P. M. of August 27, 1920, plaintiff was riding his motorcycle eastward on Third Street in the city of San Pedro, approaching the intersection of Third Street with Bandini Street, the former extending east and west and the latter north and south, the two streets intersecting at right angles. A single street-car track was located about the center of Bandini Street, the rails being slightly above grade at the street intersection. Neither of the streets was paved and each of them was somewhat rough. When plaintiff was a considerable distance from the intersection of the two streets he was traveling at a rate of about twenty miles an hour, but when within one block of the intersection the speed of his motorcycle was slowed to about ten or twelve miles an hour, and so continued until the accident upon which this action is based occurred. The headlights of each of the vehicles were burning brightly and were plainly visible to the respective operators of the, two vehicles. Just before the accident occurred defendant had been traveling west on Third Street and plaintiff was at all times traveling east on Third Street. As defendant neared the intersection of Third Street and Bandini Street he was traveling north of the center line of Third Street. On approaching the corner of Third Street and Bandini Street defendant caused his automobile to make a wide turn to the left, as though he were about to turn into Bandini- Street to the south of Third Street, but on the easterly side thereof and to the east of the street-car track. He was traveling at a speed of about four or five miles an hour. The two *766 vehicles collided very close to the southeast corner of the intersection of the two streets, and plaintiff sustained injuries on which he bases this action.
Plaintiff’s testimony relative to the accident includes the following: That he was struck where the curb would be on the southeast corner of the intersection and was traveling on the right or the south side of Third Street; that the automobile was about forty feet east of Bandini Street when he saw it commence to make a turn to the south; that it kept curving until the collision, and he was watching it make the turn; that the automobile was going slowly and he thought it was going to stop, but that it suddenly lunged ahead and struck him when he was passing in front of it; that upon entering the intersection he commenced to swerve slightly to the right at a point about seventy-five feet west of the tracks; that plaintiff was operating his motorcycle upon his right-hand side of the street and so far to the right that if a curb had been constructed he would have been on the curb. With reference to plaintiff’s position, another witness testified: “You could not get over to the right any further because he was as far as he could go.”
Plaintiff further testified that when he had gotten almost to the west intersecting line of Third Street and Bandini Street he noticed that the automobile commenced to turn to the left and when he reached the ear track the automobile was the same distance from the point of the accident that plaintiff was, and while plaintiff was on the car track the automobile was traveling four or five miles an hour. What happened after that is shown by the following questions and answers: “Q. When you were on the railway track crossing did you notice as to what the automobile was doing? A. It was going pretty slow; I thought it was going to stop. The engine was racing and I thought they were stopping there and I had plenty of time to get by; so I kept on going and just as I got right in front of them he let go of his clutch and the car gave a lunge and hit me.” Two eye-witnesses corroborated the last statement of plaintiff.
The witness J. E. File testified as follows: “Q. Did it [the automobile] change its speed at any time while you were noticing it? A. Very little, until it seemed just about the time it struck, then made a kind of jump. Q. Jumped forward? A. Yes.”
*767 The witness Mrs. Anna File testified as follows: “Q. Did you notice whether there was any difference in its speed from the first instant you saw it until it struck ? A. Well, it seemed to kind of make a jump and then stopped; just a kind of start like, and then stopped instantly.”
It is impossible to say absolutely that plaintiff was negligent or careless. The evidence presented a question of fact which was at least fairly debatable, that is, such a question that in its answer reasonable men might disagree; hence there was no error committed by the court, either in denying counsel’s motion for nonsuit or in denying the motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendant.
Appellant next complains of two instructions given by the court, in the first of which the jury was in effect told that if the plaintiff was in a place of safety and. discovered the defendant turning to the left, cutting the corner, and after discovering the defendant operating his automobile in the manner stated, speeded up his motorcycle in an effort to get ahead of the defendant’s automobile as it was cutting the corner, then he was guilty of negligence; and in the second instruction, in practically the same circumstances, the jury was instructed that if he “took the chance of speeding up his motorcycle in an effort to pass in front of defendant’s automobile at the corner of the intersection, then it is for you to determine under all the circumstances whether he was guilty of negligence or not.”
Appellant’s contention is that these two instructions were misleading and inconsistent one with the other, in that by the first instruction the jury was led to believe that if plaintiff left a place of safety and “speeded up” his motorcycle in an effort to get ahead of defendant’s auto and was injured thereby, such act constituted negligence, while by the second instruction the question of whether such an act amounted to negligence was left to the jury. But, in the first place, counsel for appellant says that the first instruction was in effect requested by himself, and the second instruction, which in substance was also requested by defendant, included the proposition as given by the court that if plaintiff “took the chance of speeding up his motorcycle, in an effort to pass in front of defendant’s automobile at the corner of the intersection, then his acts in so doing were negligent,” but that the court modified that instruction so as to leave the question of negligence to the jury and omitted from the instruction the possible question of plain *770 tiff’s contributory negligence arising from Ms knowledge of the fact that it had been a general custom for some time for vehicles to turn to the left and cut the corner at the intersection of Third and Bandini Streets in proceeding south from such intersection. Appellant’s brief contains the further statement “that there is nowhere in the entire record any testimony or evidence whatever by the respondent that he ‘speeded up’ his motorcycle in an effort to get ahead of the automobile of appellant.”
Complaint is also made of the following instruction: “But if a person, either plaintiff or defendant, is put in great peril by the negligence of the opposite party, of either doing an injury or of being injured, where immediate action is necessary to avoid it, he is not required to exercise all of that presence of mind and carefulness that are justly required of a careful and prudent man under ordinary circumstances; and the reasonableness of Ms effort to escape
*771
injury, after discovery of the danger, is a question for the jury to determine, under all the circumstances of the case. And it is for them to determine under the circumstances, where plaintiff or defendant has been put in peril of being injured or of doing injury by the negligence of the other— you are to consider that in determining the question of negligence.” It would appear that the instruction was as favorable to defendant as it was to plaintiff. But appellant contends that the giving of this instruction was erroneous for two reasons: first, that it did not exclude or negative the negligence of the respondent, if any, in placing himself in the dangerous situation; and, secondly, that it had no application to the case where respondent’s own statements showed “that he was familiar with the custom of using the east side of Bandini Street by vehicles going south thereon; that he saw the automobile for a distance of several blocks and watched it all the time it was making the turn; that he could have easily avoided any injury by slackening up his speed or slightly changing the course of his motorcycle; that nevertheless and in the very face of the moving and turning car he continued serenely on his way directly into the path of the automobile without making the slightest effort to avoid the collision.’ ’
The court having noticed all the alleged errors occurring on the trial of this ease and it appearing that none of them has resulted prejudicially to the defendant, it is ordered that the judgment herein be and the same is hereby affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
*773 A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, -after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 12, 1923.
All the Justices concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBERT REINDERS, a Minor, Etc., Respondent, v. WILLIAM OLSEN, Appellant
- Cited By
- 23 cases
- Status
- Published