Armstrong v. Spokane & Inland Empire Railway Co.

129 P. 379, 71 Wash. 624, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1377
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1913
DocketNo. 10543
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 P. 379 (Armstrong v. Spokane & Inland Empire Railway Co.) 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
Armstrong v. Spokane & Inland Empire Railway Co., 129 P. 379, 71 Wash. 624, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1377 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Morris, J.

Appellant began this action to recover for injuries claimed to have been sustained through the negligence of the respondent. Upon the trial, the appellant having put in her evidence, the court, upon motion of respondent, sustained a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, and deciding as a matter of law that verdict should be in respondent’s favor, discharged the jury and dismissed the action.

The appeal urges error in this ruling. The record does not disclose the reasons for the court’s ruling, as it contains [625]*625neither the argument of respective counsel upon the motion nor any comment made by the court, but is confined in this particular to the formal entry of judgment with recitals as above indicated. We assume, however, from the briefs that the point considered was contributory negligence, and our discussion will be confined to that question.

The appellant, who resides at Spokane, had spent part of the evening of September 23, 1912, at the home of a friend, Mrs. McCauley. At about 7:30, the two ladies started down town, and walked a block to the corner of Washington street and Augusta avenue to take a south-bound car on Washington. The night is described as quite dark. There were no street lights on Washington within two blocks of this corner, and shade trees obscured the light one block east on Augusta. Washington street was being paved at this point. The west half of the street was evidently finished, while the east half had only the loose foundation rock laid thereon. Red lights were displayed as a warning of the unfinished condition of the street.

Prior to the street being tom up for paving, respondent maintained two tracks, the east track for north-bound and the west track for south-bound- cars; but while the paving was being laid, it had been the custom to run cars in both directions on one side of the street while the other was being paved, and to alternate between the east and west tracks according to the condition of the street, the cars always running on the side of the street on which the paving had been completed, and having frequent cross-over switches to enable them to do so. Appellant knew of this custom, as she was a frequent passenger on this line, although for a week prior to the accident she had been using the Division street line to take her down town, and did not know the situation in this particular at this comer.

Appellant and Mrs. McCauley reaching Washington street, crossed over to the west side, looking up and down the street for approaching cars. They saw one turning east [626]*626into Sinto avenue, three blocks south, and another at Indiana avenue, two blocks north. Sinto avenue is the crest of a hill, and from that point to Indiana avenue is a down grade. As appellant saw the car at Indiana avenue, she spoke to Mrs. McCauley, saying, “There is a car coming;” to which Mrs. McCauley replied, “That car is waiting at the switch for another to come down.” Reaching the west side of the street, appellant took a position alongside and apparently quite near the car track, and standing facing north, centered attention upon the car at Indiana avenue, Mrs. McCauley standing behind her. She says she heard no bell or other warning of an approaching car. During the short time they so stood, nothing was said until appellant heard Mrs. McCauley call her name, and turning to the south, was immediately struck in the face by a north-bound car and knocked to the ground.

Mrs. McCauley testifies that they stood there a short time, perhaps three or four minutes, when she heard a car bell, and looking around to the south, saw a car coming north, apparently between Sinto and Maxwell avenues, which would be between the second and third blocks to the south; that the car was running fast, and she watched it as it came' down, and as it approached her she stepped back and looked around at appellant, who just then threw up her hand and said, “Pshaw.” Fearing the car was about to strike appellant, she “made a grab for her, and called her name to draw her attention to the fact the car was coming,” but before she could reach appellant, the car struck her. This is, we think, all the testimony in the case that is material upon the question of contributory negligence.

It is apparent that appellant, with her attention riveted upon the car at Indiana avenue, and impatiently awaiting its arrival, was wholly oblivious of her surroundings. The fact that the Indiana avenue car was not approaching, coupled with Mrs. McCauley’s remark that it was waiting at the switch for another car to come down, the red signal [627]*627lights indicating an uncompleted condition of the street at that point, her knowledge of what that uncompleted condition meant, and that while it existed, both north and southbound cars ran on one track, and that track the one on the finished side of the street, the dark night, with its lack of light — all these facts would, it seems to us, indicate to any person of ordinary prudence that some attention must be taken of them as indicating an unusual situation that required at least ordinary care; and that, under such circumstances, it was not ordinary care, nor the act of a woman of ordinary prudence, to stand upon or so close to a street car track as to be struck by a passing car. Her remark to Mrs. McCauley just before she was struck, and her gesture when she threw up her hand and said “Pshaw”, indicated her impatience at the delay of the car at Indiana avenue. What was the cause of the delay? Mrs. McCauley had told her in response to her suggestion of a coming car when they first observed it. She had been told that the car was on the switch waiting for another car to come down from the south. With two tracks there would be no necessity for such a wait, but with one there was, and she knew why, although she says she did not know it that night, meaning, we take it, that it did not occur to her or that she forgot it. She was on the completed side of the street, and, although she had not been on this line for a week, her previous experience as a passenger had taught her that the track on the completed side of the street was the one used by cars going in both directions.

She says she heard no car approaching, nor any indication of its approach; but how can we escape the conclusion that, if she did not, it was only because she was oblivious of everything except the Indiana car and her strong desire for its coming? Mrs. McCauley, standing just behind her, heard a bell, and turning, saw the car that struck her between two and three blocks away, and watched it as it came down the grade. We know, therefore, that there was a signal [628]*628of danger sufficient to engage Mrs. McCauley’s attention and enable her to take a position of safety. True, Mrs. McCauley says she does not know whether it was a bell on this car that she heard or not. Whatever it was or wherever it was, it served the purpose of conveying information to her that a car was approaching.

Had appellant been as alert as Mrs. McCauley, it would have served the same purpose to her and prevented her injury. What was the difference in the attitude of these two women? It seems to us the answer is, the difference between a woman of ordinary prudence, exercising ordinary care for her safety and thus enabled to prevent injury, and one who overlooks every present fact calculated to draw her attention to her surroundings, and impelled by her impatient desire for the quick approach of her car, forgets everything but that desire. She says she heard no warning bell. We will overlook the testimony of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P. 379, 71 Wash. 624, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-spokane-inland-empire-railway-co-wash-1913.