Motor Vehicle Negligence
Generally, an action for negligence requires a showing that the defendant
vehicle operator breached a legal duty owed to the injured plaintiff, and
that the breach of such duty was a proximate or legal cause of the
plaintiff's injuries.
For example, in California, a motorist, driving on either the public
or private roads, must exercise the degree of care and caution that an
ordinarily careful and prudent person, acting in the same or similar
circumstances, would exercise for the safety of others traveling on the
road. [See, e.g., Sills v. Forbes, (1939) 33 Cal.App.2d 219, 227.]
It is well established in most states that a motorist, must, at all
times, use ordinary care to avoid colliding with another, and must be alert
and watchful so as not to place himself/herself in danger, and, while such
motorist may assume that others will use ordinary care, he/she cannot for
that reason omit any of the care that the law demands of him/her.
Pedestrians are also required to use ordinary care. However,
drivers of vehicles must be use ordinary care to prevent injuries to
pedestrians.
Whether or not a driver's view was obstructed, whether the motorist
was in violation of the Vehicle Code or other statute, the knowledge of the
motorist as to the conditions, and the weather conditions are all factors to
be considered in the investigation of an accident.
For example, in many states, an injured motorist can legally
establish his/her claim through utilization of the legal theory of
negligence per se. Generally, in order to establish negligence per se, the
injured party must show that a defendant motorist violated a statute,
ordinance or regulation. The violation of that statute must have
proximately caused the injury, and the injury must have resulted from an
occurrence of the nature, which the statute was designed to prevent.
Lastly, in most jurisdictions, the injured party must establish that he/she
was one of the class of persons for whose protection this statute was
adopted. [See, e.g., California Evidence Code, Section 669].
An example of negligence per se follows: A motorist suddenly stops
her automobile without first giving an appropriate signal to the driver of
the vehicle which was immediately behind her. The vehicle behind collided
with her automobile, there being no showing that she did not have a
reasonable opportunity to give the required signal before stopping. Under
virtually these circumstances, a court in California found that the
motorist's failure to give signal of her intention to stop constituted
negligence per se. [See, e.g., Lutz v. Schendel, (1959) 175 Cal.App.2d 140;
California Vehicle Code Sections 22109, 22110].
If you or someone you know has been injured
as the result of an auto accident or car crash,
you need the assistance of The Scarlett Law Group.
Call 800-262-7576
today to speak with a California Personal Injury Attorney.