Beaulier v. Mahoney

283 P. 707, 155 Wash. 141, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 786
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1930
DocketNo. 22025. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 283 P. 707 (Beaulier v. Mahoney) 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
Beaulier v. Mahoney, 283 P. 707, 155 Wash. 141, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 786 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

This action was brought against the operator of a taxicab and the insurer of the operator to recover damages for personal injuries. Respondent, suing by his guardian ad litem, was a boy of nearly eighteen years sit the time of the accident. He .will be referred to as if the only respondent. He was employed at the postoffice in Spokane, delivering special delivery letters. At about midnight on October 6,1928, he had finished his shift at the postoffice and was travel-ling eastward on his bicycle on Main avenue, Spokane, returning to his home. Main. avenue is one of the principal thoroughfares, running east and west. Stevens street, another main business street down town, intersects Main avenue, running north and south. The boy was traveling about eight feet out from the curb on the south side of Main avenue, and, when he reached the intersection of Main avenue and Stevens street and was eight to twelve feet within the intersection, the taxicab overtook him, cut around in front of him and collided with his bicycle, throwing respondent up into the air so that he fell from a height of about six feet to the pavement. Two eyewitnesses of the collision immediately went to the boy, found him bleeding from the mouth, was mumbling to himself, but was not rendered unconscious. He was taken to the emergency hospital, where a cursory examination was made, disclosing the loss of a front tooth. The boy was informed that the case was one for a dentist, and he was then taken t.o his home. When taken to his home, it was found that he had severe bruises and contusions on his head and a bruised shoulder. He had fallen on his head and right jaw. Although the evidence was *143 conflicting upon that matter, the jury were justified in finding from the evidence on behalf of respondent that he suffered bruises and contusions, loss of a tooth, a serious impairment of the vision of one eye, impairment of his mental faculties and had suffered severe headaches from the time of the accident.

Respondent was traveling in a straight course along Main avenue at the rate of four or five miles per hour. He had no light on the front of his bicycle, but had a reflecting mirror on the rear, which would show red to any one approaching, with lights, from behind. Ma-honey was driving his taxicab to the rear of respondent and within the car rails going at a speed estimated by the spectators at nearly forty miles an hour. When he turned the corner in the intersection, his car left heavy skid marks of the inside wheels on the pavement, eight or ten inches wide. After Mahoney entered the intersection, and until after the accident, he was traveling over twenty miles an hour. The statutory limit at and across such intersections is fifteen miles an hour. The streets at the intersection were brilliantly lighted, so that one could see a man at least a block— perhaps two blocks — away, on the street. There was no traffic or obstruction in the street which interfered with Mahoney’s seeing respondent. When questioned by police officers, Mahoney claimed that he did not see respondent or know that he had collided with him, although he heard the taxicab strike something which he thought was thrown up against the fender. The collision was heard half a city block or more.

The jury which tried the case returned a verdict as follows:

“We, the jury in the case of Ed. Beaulier, an infant, by Paul H. Beaulier, his guardian ad litem, plaintiff, vs. Leo A. Mahoney and United States Inter-Insurance Association, defendants, find for the plaintiff and *144 assess Ms damages at the sum of three thousand and no/100 dollars ($3,000), and against the defendant, Leo A. Mahoney (for any sum in excess of $2,500) for the sum of five hundred and no/100 dollars.”

The allegation of negligence against Mahoney in the complaint, somewhat abridged, is that he was driving easterly on Main avenue, and, at or about the time respondent reached the intersection of the streets, Ma-honey negligently and carelessly drove and operated his automobile at an excessive rate of speed, to wit, in excess of the limit fixed by the. statutes of the state of Washington, and while so operating and driving his automobile, turned to the right and into and against the bicycle which respondent was riding, without giving any signal or notice of his approach or intention so to do.

The court instructed the jury that, if Mahoney was driving Ms automobile and came into collision with Beaulier at the intersection of streets, it was his duty, under the law of Washington, when approaching such intersection, to look out and give right of way to Beau-lier if Beaulier was on Mahoney’s right, if they were simultaneously approacMng a given point within the intersection, irrespective of which first entered and reached the intersection.

The first assignment of error is based upon the foregoing instruction.

It is asserted that the only negligence alleged on the part of Mahoney was that he drove his automobile at an excessive rate of speed, turned to the right and ran into the boy’s bicycle without giving him any notice or signal of his approach or intention to turn. It is conceded that failure to accord the right of way given respondent under the law is .an act of negligence recognized by law and, in order to be used as a ground of negligence by respondent, should have been alleged in *145 Ms complaint, to which appellants would have had a right to move, demur, or answer. It is insisted that, since both were proceeding eastwardly along the same street, they did not approach an intersection from different directions, for wMch situation the law relating to approach of two cars to a given point within an intersection was intended to apply.

Eddy v. Spelger & Hurlbut, 117 Wash. 632, 201 Pac. 898, is cited, where the negligence complained of was speed and failure to give warning, and the court instructed that it was the duty of the defendant to have good and sufficient brakes on his car, and this court held that such instruction was not based upon any allegation or proof, was therefore erroneous and must of necessity have prejudiced appellant’s rights. Shipley v. Nelson, 121 Wash. 39, 207 Pac. 1046, and Kerr v. Hansen, 140 Wash. 459, 249 Pac. 977, are also cited, where there were similar radical variances from the allegations and proofs in instructions.

There is no such radical variance here. A violation of the right of way was alleged in the complaint, in that it was averred that Mahoney, “at the intersection, turned to the right and into and against the bicycle of respondent.” The evidence is undisputed that both were simultaneously approaching the intersection. When Mahoney turned to his right at the intersection, he placed the boy’s bicycle on his right, and the boy thereby acqmred such benefit as would attach to the enjoyment of that right of way across the intersection. Onkels v. Stogsdill, 151 Wash. 194, 275 Pac. 692.

The undisputed evidence is that both respondent and Mahoney were from eight to twelve feet within the intersection when the collision occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 707, 155 Wash. 141, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaulier-v-mahoney-wash-1930.