Hayward v. Downer

Plaintiffs obtained a verdict of two thousand dollars for damages suffered by Emilie Hayward, the wife of her coplaintiff, when she fell into a ditch or trench excavated by the defendant in a public street during the course of his construction of a sewer system under contract. Work under this contract covered a large area in the particular neighborhood in which the plaintiff lived and had been in course of construction for a period of some two *Page 451 and a half months prior to the date of the injury. On the night on which the injury occurred, the plaintiffs had been visiting a neighbor and on their return home over a path which they had frequently used the wife fell into the trench and suffered the injuries which are the basis of the accident. Plaintiffs had a general verdict in the sum of two thousand dollars, and from the judgment upon the verdict this appeal is taken.

The only grounds urged upon the appeal are: (1) That the respondent Emilie Hayward had knowledge or the means of knowledge of the existence of the danger, that she voluntarily assumed the risk, and was therefore guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (2) that the respondent Emilie Hayward's husband had actual knowledge of the danger and that his negligence in failing to warn his wife of such danger bars recovery by both himself and his wife.

[1] There is much respectable authority in support of appellant's first point, and such, in fact, was the rule in this state until the supreme court, in Meindersee v. Meyers,188 Cal. 498, 503 [205 P. 1078], held that, notwithstanding this knowledge and means of knowledge, it was for the jury to determine whether it was a want of ordinary care for the injured not to have the source of danger in mind.

Nothing was said by the supreme court regarding the standing of the husband in relation to the award of damages for his wife's injury and no effort was made to distinguish the rule affirmed in Basler v. Sacramento G. E. Co., 158 Cal. 514, 518 [Ann. Cas. 1912A, 642, 111 P. 530], to the effect that the husband's failure to notify his wife of approaching danger while under his care bars recovery by him for injuries suffered by the wife.

[2] However, the Meindersee case was decided upon a state of facts similar to those before us, and we must assume from the decision that all these questions were taken into consideration and that, where either husband or wife having knowledge or previous notice of the unsafe condition of a street voluntarily puts himself in a place of danger from which injury results to the wife, it is a question for the jury to determine whether either is guilty of contributory negligence.

Judgment affirmed.

Sturtevant, J., and Langdon, P. J., concurred. *Page 452