Benefiel v. Eagle Brass Foundry

282 P. 213, 154 Wash. 330, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 746
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1929
DocketNo. 22085. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 282 P. 213 (Benefiel v. Eagle Brass Foundry) 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
Benefiel v. Eagle Brass Foundry, 282 P. 213, 154 Wash. 330, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 746 (Wash. 1929).

Opinion

*331 Beals, J.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff, in an action brought to recover damages for personal injuries, tried to the court, defendants appeal.

Error is assigned upon the action of the superior court in appointing physicians to examine respondent, in finding appellant Jorgenson guilty of negligence, and in failing to find respondent guilty of such contributory negligence as would in law bar his recovery 1 of judgment against appellants.

Respondent, a battalion chief in the Seattle fire department, in command of the fire station located at the corner of Fourth avenue south and Horton street, 1 together with his chauffeur, left the station during the afternoon of July 12, 1928, as they testified, and as the trial court found, in response to an alarm of fife, and proceeded south to Spokane street, thence west on the last mentioned thoroughfare, which is a much traveled highway leading to West Seattle. Spokane street, westerly from its intersection with Foufth avenue south, consists, for quite a distance, of two ribbons of pavement, each about thirty-five feet widej separated by about seventy-five feet of unpaved highway. West bound traffic uses the north ribbon and east bound traffic the south. Respondent was proceeding west along the north pavement. Appellant Jorgenson, who was in the employ of appellant, Eagle Brass. Foundry, a corporation, as driver of a Ford truck,' was driving his truck, on his employer’s business, in a northerly direction along a plank roadway, not an improved street,. which crosses the center unpaved portion of Spokane street from south to north. He had reached the north ribbon and proceeded some small distance thereon when a collision occurred be- 1 tween the truck which he was driving and the car in which respondent was riding. As a result of the collision, respondent was severely injured, and brought *332 this action seeking recovery of damages against appellants.

Thereafter appellants moved the court for an order requiring respondent to submit to a physical examination by a commission of physicians, suggesting to the court the names of three physicians whom appellants desired to examine respondent. Respondent’s counsel objected to two of the three physicians suggested by appellants. After a hearing, the court entered an order allowing appellants to name one doctor, the respondent to name another, the court naming a third, and further directing that the respondent submit to a physical examination by the three so designated. The court named on the commission the doctor suggested by appellants to whom the respondent had no objection.

Appellants contend that the court committed reversible error in permitting respondent to name one of the physicians who were to make the examination. While the course followed by the trial court in permitting the respondent to name one of the three physicians who were to examine him was unusual and to some extent irregular, we find therein no reversible error. Respondent was examined by two of the three physicians who were selected by appellants for the purpose of making the examination. Appellants made no application to the court for any further examination by other physicians, and we hold that, in the matter of the physical examination of respondent, the record discloses no reversible error.

The following sections of traffic Ordinance No. 53223 of the city of Seattle, which was received in evidence, are pertinent to the questions before us for determination.

“Section 22. Right of Way: Vehicles of the fire department, when going to, on duty at, or returning *333 from a fire, shall have the right-of-way over all vehicles and persons. Every operator of a vehicle, upon the approach of the apparatus of the fire department, shall immediately proceed to the right hand curb and come to a full stop standing parallel thereto, . . . It shall be unlawful for any person operating any vehicle, street car, locomotive or railroad car, in or upon any street, or for any person standing or walking in any such street, to fail, refuse or neglect to allow the right-of-way to apparatus or members of the fire department, when the same is going to, on duty at, or returning from a fire.”
“Section 100. It shall be unlawful to drive or operate a vehicle in crossing or turning about upon a crossing, other than at a street intersection except when at á street end.”
“Section 103. A driver already upon a street shall have the right of way over a driver entering at a point other than a street intersection, and it shall be the duty of such driver to yield the right-of-way to the driver already upon the street; provided that the foregoing shall not apply to the apparatus of the fire and police departments.”
“Section 104. No driver shall enter any street from any other point than a street intersection at a rate of speed faster than five (5) miles per hour, nor without first attracting the attention of approaching pedestrians and vehicles by signalling with sounding device: Provided that the foregoing shall not apply to the fire and police departments of the city.”

Under this ordinance, the speed limit at which vehicles may travel upon the public streets is fixed at twenty-five miles per hour. It is not disputed that the respondent’s car was traveling at a rate of speed greater than twenty-five miles per hour, and, it being conceded that there is no ordinance of the city of Seattle exempting motor vehicles belonging to the city fire department from the limitation imposed by this regulation, appellants contend that respondent was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law in *334 exceeding the speed limit. For the purposes of this opinion, we . assume that any negligence on the part of respondent’s chauffeur, should be imputed to respondent.

In maintaining a fire department, a city is exercising a governmental function, and a fireman, instead of being considered as an ordinary employee of the city, “is in fact a public officer and engaged in a governmental duty.” Johnson v. Pease, 126 Wash. 163, 217 Pac. 1005.

As to whether or not respondent, in answering the fire alarm, was.required to observe the ordinary speed limit fixed by ordinance for vehicles traveling upon the public streets, the opinion of this court in the case of Clark v. Wilson, 108 Wash. 127, 183 Pac. 103, is in point. In that case, it was held that a police officer of the city of Seattle, riding upon a motorcycle, responding to an emergency call received by him in the line of his duty, was not limited to the speed prescribed for ordinary vehicles, and that it could not be held that the officer, in traveling on the public street at the rate of thirty-five or forty miles per hour, was. as matter of law guilty of contributory negligence. The opinion of this court in the case of State v. Gorham, 110 Wash. 330, 188 Pac. 457, 9 A. L. R. 365, is to the same effect.

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Bluebook (online)
282 P. 213, 154 Wash. 330, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benefiel-v-eagle-brass-foundry-wash-1929.