Anderson v. Grandy

283 P. 186, 154 Wash. 547, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 790
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 21972. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 283 P. 186 (Anderson v. Grandy) 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
Anderson v. Grandy, 283 P. 186, 154 Wash. 547, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 790 (Wash. 1929).

Opinions

Parker, J.

The plaintiff, Anderson, commenced this action in the superior court for King county seeking recovery for personal injuries claimed by him as the result of the negligent driving of an automobile owned by, and driven for the joint use and benefit of, the defendants G-randy and his wife, and also as the result of the concurring negligent operation of a street car owned and operated by the city of Seattle. The cause proceeded to trial in the superior court, which resulted in a judgment of dismissal in favor of the city rendered, as a matter of law, by the court upon the *549 ground that the evidence failed to show any negligence on the part of the city, and also a verdict and judgment awarding to Anderson recovery against both Grandy and his wife. Anderson has appealed from the judgment of dismissal in favor of the city; and Grandy and his wife have appealed from the judgment rendered against them. The controlling facts, as we think the jury was warranted in viewing them from the evidence, and manifestly did view them, may be summarized as follows:

The public street in Seattle known as West Marginal way runs approximately north and south. It is, as platted, one hundred feet wide. Its surface, for a considerable distance north and south from the place in question, is not capable of use for vehicle traffic without being improved, and for all practical purposes the same may be said as to pedestrian use. Its improvements consist only of a board sidewalk three feet wide, along its west side; a paved vehicle roadway nineteen feet wide, the west edge of which is three feet east of the sidewalk; a single street car track, the west rail of which is about one and one-half feet east of the east edge of the pavement; and a planked roadway some fifty to sixty feet wide north and south, extending from the east edge of the pavement across the car track easterly into Idaho street which comes into Marginal way at approximately right angles from the east.

At about half past three o’clock during the day in question, Anderson was on a south-bound street car of the city’s lines approaching the usual stopping place of such cars at the north edge of the planked roadway leading from the pavement east across the car track into Idaho street. The street car was not equipped so as to readily take on or let off passengers other than through a door on its right side near its front end, the car being what is commonly known as a one-man car. *550 The door on the left near the front end by the side of where the motorman sat, he being also conductor, was kept closed and could not be opened from the inside; the custom being to take on and let off all passengers through the right front door; this manifestly because it was regarded, as a general practice, the safer way, in view, of the double track and other traffic conditions generally prevailing in the city, though at that particular point it might be considered safer to take on and let off passengers through the left front door where they would not alight on the paved roadway along which there was two-way vehicle traffic.

As the street car approached Idaho street, Anderson got up from his seat, went forward and made known to the motorman his desire to get off there, he being the only passenger intending to get off there. The street car was stopped at the usual place, the motorman opened the right front door, without leaving his seat, by some lever device, when Anderson stepped down onto the pavement. The extension of the body of the car and its step reached to a line outside the rail approximately perpendicular over and parallel with the east edge of the pavement. When Anderson stepped down onto the pavement, or possibly an instant before, he looked to the south along the pavement and saw, some two hundred feet away, an automobile approaching from that direction along the east side of the pavement, which, of course, was its proper place, in view of the two-way traffic on the pavement. He could not judge its speed, as it was coming practically directly towards him, and had no reason to suppose it was being unlawfully driven as to its speed.

The automobile was being driven by Mrs. Grrandy for the use and benefit of herself and husband, and was owned by them. Anderson intended to go forward and pass east in front of the car towards the place of *551 Ms employment on Idaho street, and started to do so, taking two or three steps towards the south, hut before starting to cross the track, the street car started on its way, preventing him from crossing in front of it. •He then stopped, standing still, close to the slowly moving street car, facing it, about one foot from it, with a view of going east after the car would pass Mm. When the car had moved less than its length, probably three-quarters of its length, Anderson was struck by the approaching automobile driven by Mrs. Grrandy from the south, and thereby very seriously injured.

It was then broad daylight, and the driver of the automobile could plainly see Anderson by the side of the street car when two hundred feet or more away, just as Anderson could see the approaching automobile from the same distance. The automobile was being driven, when that distance away from Anderson, at thirty-five miles or more per hour, which, being witMn the city limits, was an unlawful rate of speed, and its speed did not appreciably diminish up to very near the time Anderson was struck. There was sufficient time for the driver of the automobile to avoid striking Anderson, after seeing his position, either by slowing the speed of the automobile or by proceeding along a course but a slight distance west of where he was standing. Anderson, when he alighted from the street car, had good reason to believe that he would be able to safely pass east across the track, either in front of or to the rear of the car, before the automobile would traverse the some two hundred feet distance it was away, or that it would safely stop or pass him while he was standing close to the street car, if its driver exercised due care, the place being the usual stopping place of the street car and at a street intersection. Other facts will be noticed as may seem necessary as we proceed.

*552 We first notice Anderson’s appeal from the judgment in favor of the city, dismissing the action as to it. It is contended in his behalf that the city was negligent, and the jury might so find, in failing to furnish him, as a passenger on the street car, a reasonably safe place to alight therefrom; that is, that, in view of the two-way traffic on the paved roadway, the city should have furnished opportunity for him to get off its car on the left side and thus avoid his getting off on the pavement on the right side where there was two-way vehicle traffic.

We cannot agree with this contention. We see no substantial difference between one-way traffic on a paved roadway and two-way traffic on the whole or a part of a paved roadway, in so far as danger to passengers getting on and off street cars stopping on a track immediately adjacent to or in the center of a paved roadway is concerned. It is well known that, at the vast majority of stopping places for street cars at street intersections, it is necessary and customary that passengers get on and off street cars directly from and to the surface of the vehicle roadway.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 186, 154 Wash. 547, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-grandy-wash-1929.