Adler v. University Boat Mart, Inc.

387 P.2d 509, 63 Wash. 2d 334, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 559
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1963
Docket36568
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 387 P.2d 509 (Adler v. University Boat Mart, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adler v. University Boat Mart, Inc., 387 P.2d 509, 63 Wash. 2d 334, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 559 (Wash. 1963).

Opinions

Hill, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in a wrongful death action.

The defendant, Robert E. Richardson, President of the defendant University Boat Mart, Inc. (who will be hereafter referred to as though he were the sole defendant), rented an 18-foot plywood boat with outboard motor to Gerald Millholland. Richardson had assured Millholland that the boat was suitable for cruising from Tacoma to the San Juan Islands.

When Millholland took delivery at the Boat Mart in Lake Union, he had with him his 10-year-old son and two adults, Oscar Williams and Robert Paul Adler. They started for Tacoma at about 7 p.m. The trip was uneventful until, off Point Robinson, water was discovered in the cockpit. They were unable to find anything with which to bail the rapidly rising water. It was decided that Williams and Adler should go forward and sit on the bow in an effort to bring the stern up higher in the water. The boy was sitting on the portside and Millholland was standing on [336]*336the starboard side operating the controls; Williams went to the portside in order to climb around the windshield on his way forward; and Adler, instead of going to the starboard to keep the boat in trim, followed him to the portside. The weight of the two men and the boy on the portside and the water in the cockpit also shifting to that side, caused a sudden list, and the two men and the boy were thrown into the water. The boy wore a life jacket and Williams had two buoyant cushions, one of which he immediately gave to Adler. Millholland, seeing his son thrown into the water, jumped to his assistance, leaving the throttle open and the boat in gear. It circled its former occupants twice and then went away from them. The engine ran for 4 or 5 minutes; the mast lights were visible for another 4 or 5 minutes; and then it was no longer visible.

The tanker Dispatch came along about an hour1 later and picked up Williams and, then later, Millholland and the boy; but, though an extensive search was made and a buoyant cushion was floating in the water, Adler was never found. (There were only three buoyant cushions and each of the men had had one.)

The next morning the boat was found upside down on a beach. A patch in the bottom of the hull, which had been applied 7 years earlier, was loose at one end; othér than this there was no serious damage to the hull.

This action was brought by Earline Adler, as admini-stratrix of the estate of Robert Paul Adler, deceased, under the wrongful death statute. RCW 4.20.Ó10, 4.20.020.

It was tried to the court, and the court found for the plaintiff both on the theory of negligence, i.e., that the defendant was negligent in failing to properly inspect-the boat, as the defective patch should have been discovered on a proper examination; and on the theory of an express and implied warranty of fitness.

The defendant urges 18 assignments of error, but the decisive issues are: (a) whether the evidence established [337]*337the death of Adler; (b) whether negligence of the defendant, which was the proximate cause of Adler’s death, was established; (c) whether Adler was contributorily negligent in overloading the portside of the boat; (d) whether Millholland’s abandoning the boat was a superseding cause of Adler’s drowning (“d” assumes that had Millholland stayed with the boat Adler and the others would probably have been rescued immediately); and (e) whether there was both an express and implied warranty of suitability of the boat, delivered by the defendant to Millholland, for cruising in Puget Sound.

We will consider these issues in that order:

(a) Evidence of death of Adler: The contention that the body of Adler not having been recovered death could not be proved, without the presumption afforded by the lapse of 7 years, is without merit. Death, like any other fact, may be proved by circumstantial evidence. Harris v. Security Benefit Ass’n (1935), 185 Wash. 25, 52 P. (2d) 329; Fordyce v. Modern Woodmen of America (1924), 129 Wash. 364, 225 Pac. 434; Brownlee v. Mutual Ben. Health & Accident Ass’n (C.C.A. 9th, 1928), 29 F. (2d) 71; Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Searing (C.C.A. 3rd, 1917), 240 Fed. 653; Harvey v. Fidelity & Cas. Co. (C.C.A. 6th, 1912), 200 Fed. 925, cert. denied 229 U. S. 614 (1913); Veselsky v. Bankers Life Co. (1928), 248 Ill. App. 176; In re Conover’s Will (1958), 13 Misc. (2d) 731, 177 N.Y.S. (2d) 75; 61 A.L.R. 1327, 1330-31 (1929); 25 C.J.S. Death, § 9 (1941).

Adler was last seen when the small boat from the Dispatch approached Millholland and his son. After they had been taken aboard, a thorough search was conducted but only a buoyant cushion could be found. Adler had been, at that time, a mile and a half from shore and had been in the cold water an hour. The other two men were suffering from exposure when rescued. There is no suggestion of any reason why he should want to disappear. It seems to us that the court could have reached no other reasonable conclusion than that Adler had drowned.

(b) Negligence of defendant: The negligence of the defendant, as found by the trial court, centered around the [338]*338patch in the forward starboard hull, one end of which was found to be pushed inboard when the beached boat was found the morning after the tragedy.

The trial court found that though the defendant knew of the patch, he

“ . . . did not consider the existence of said patch as significant nor did he sufficiently or properly test or examine patch or hull for soundness,”

and that this also applied to the defendant’s repairman. The trial court further found:

“That there existed near the end of said patch, at said time, a condition known as ‘dry rot’, which condition had wasted the wood of the hull on the edge of such patch and caused the said patch to become unsound. That said condition was discoverable at said time under proper examination and testing.”

If there was dry rot, the evidence was conclusive that it would be readily discovered if the patched area was tapped soundly.

Where a trial court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence, they will not be disturbed on appeal. Hoke v. Stevens-Norton, Inc. (1962), 60 Wn. (2d) 775, 375 P. (2d) 743. (We stated this proposition at least eight times in the last complete volume of our reports, i.e., 60 Wn. (2d)).

The trial court further found that the boat was filling rapidly with water which, unknown to its occupants, was entering the hull through the defective patch; and, fearful that the craft would founder by the stern, it was agreed that Williams and Adler would go forward to the bow to level the craft.

The defendant asserts that the trial court’s finding, that the water in the craft which imperiled it came through the defective patch, is mere conjecture.

On the contrary, we think it was not only a permissible inference, but the only inference that a disinterested person could draw.

The constantly rising water in the boat was in no wise conjectural; the defendant’s suggestion that it might have [339]

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Adler v. University Boat Mart, Inc.
387 P.2d 509 (Washington Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
387 P.2d 509, 63 Wash. 2d 334, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adler-v-university-boat-mart-inc-wash-1963.