Bowker v. Illinois Electric Co.
Before: Thompson
THOMPSON (IRA F.), J.
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries to the plaintiff, resulting in a verdict in the sum of $5,600. The defendants prosecute this appeal from the judgment.
The injuries resulted from a collision of two automobiles on the Roosevelt Highway in Los Angeles County, in one of which, a Cadillac, the plaintiff was riding as a guest. The Cadillac was owned by a man named Phillips who was on the right-hand side of the front seat at the time of the accident, and was being driven by a person called Jenkins, and Mrs. Bowker was seated between them. The defendant Thornburgh was driving a Dodge car, and he was the agent and servant of the corporate defendant Illinois Electric Co. It was claimed by respondent that Thornburgh was driving on the left or wrong side of the road; that he crowded the Cadillac completely off the highway where it was struck, overturned and wrecked. It is conceded by appellants that upon the issue of negligence the evidence was conflicting, and that, when tested by the rules governing the determination of appeals, sustains the verdict.
It is urged, however, that the court fell into error when the judge instructed the jury as follows: “Any negligence of which Jenkins may have been guilty in the opera
[742]
tion of his ear cannot be imputed to or charged against the plaintiff unless he was her agent, and he was not her agent unless she had full authority to direct, control and command him in the driving of said car, or unless you find they were engaged in a joint enterprise. It is not sufficient to make an enterprise joint that the persons were coming from or bound on a common mission, but it is necessary for each to have authority in the control, management and driving of said car.” It is not disputed that the instruction substantially states the law of imputed negligence in the case of a passenger or guest' in an automobile but it is said that the respondent was not the guest of the driver of the automobile but of the owner Phillips, hence the instruction was not applicable. It is also argued that the court inadvertently and erroneously used the expression “his car” as indicating that Jenkins was the owner of the automobile instead of Phillips. Assuming, for the moment that there was negligence on the part of the driver of the car and also negligence on the part of the owner thereof in not requiring the former to drive differently, it would still remain the immediate negligence of Jenkins which contributed to the injuries and that negligence could not under the law be imputed to the respondent except under the conditions defined in the instruction. Whether the respondent was guilty of negligence herself was left to the jury by other instructions. The appellants cannot complain that these other instructions are not more definite upon the question. Evidently they were satisfied at the time of trial because they asked for none in addition. So far as the expression “his car” is concerned the testimony establishes without contradiction that the automobile belonged to Phillips. This fact was not in dispute. The words were then evidently and patently used to designate the car under his immediate control, the car which he was driving. Under the circumstances of the case it is impossible for us to believe the jury understood them in any different light.
More from California Court of Appeal
- People v. Hill (1998)
- In Re Autumn H. (1994)
- Nwosu v. Uba (2004)
- In Re Casey D. (1999)
- Santisas v. Goodin (1998)
- Cahill v. San Diego Gas & Electric Co. (2011)
- People v. Rivera (2015)
- People v. Barnett (1998)
- People v. Serrano (2012)
- Benach v. County of Los Angeles (2007)