Blackburn v. Groce

283 P.2d 115, 46 Wash. 2d 529, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 517
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1955
Docket33027
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 283 P.2d 115 (Blackburn v. Groce) 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
Blackburn v. Groce, 283 P.2d 115, 46 Wash. 2d 529, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 517 (Wash. 1955).

Opinion

Hill, J.

This case concerns the effect of comments by a trial judge, apart from which we have much the same issues and questions presented as in any other intersection collision between a favored driver traveling on an arterial and a disfavored driver entering the arterial, except that the disfavored driver, thanks tó the doctrine of last clear chance, is here the prevailing party. The favored driver and her husband appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict favorable to the plaintiff, the disfavored driver. We shall refer to J. Evan Blackburn, the disfavored driver, as though he were the only respondent, and Anita L. Fowler, the favored driver, as though she were the only appellant.

Contrary to appellant’s contention, this case represents a proper situation for the application of the doctrine of last clear chance. The jury was entitled to find that the disfavored driver in this case drove his Chevrolet onto an east-west arterial highway from the north, intending to make a left turn and proceed east on the arterial. When he saw a Cadillac driven by appellant approaching from the east, he concluded (probably erroneously) that it was safer to back up and try to get off the highway than to continue across the westbound traffic lane in front of the oncoming car. When hit by the Cadillac, all but the front eighteen inches, or a little less, of the Chevrolet was off the blacktopped portion of the highway. Conceding contributory negligence on the part of the respondent, it is agreed that there was no other car in sight in either direction, and the appellant had not only eight or more feet on her own westbound traffic lane, but all ten feet of the eastbound traffic lane in which to avoid his car. (The blacktopped portion of the arterial highway was approximately *532 twenty feet in width with a center line dividing the east and westbound lanes.) •

The question of whether the appellant could and should have avoided hitting respondent’s car was submitted to the jury on a last clear chance instruction, as was the question of whether she was in an emergent situation in consequence of his negligence. (Her testimony on this issue was that the respondent driver had backed his car entirely off the highway, and then suddenly came forward onto the highway again, thus creating an emergency. This the jury apparently did not believe.)

If the jury believed the respondent, it was justified in finding that the favored driver herself created any emergency which confronted her, and that she had ample opportunity and the last clear chance to avoid the collision.

The judgment for the respondent based on the verdict of the jury must be affirmed in the absence of some prejudicial error in the instructions, rulings on evidence, or the trial judge’s comment on the evidence.

Appellant urges that respondent could not recover because of his contributory negligence as a matter of law. We agree with the appellant that, under the respondent’s own testimony, he was negligent in permitting his car to project into the appellant driver’s lane of traffic, whatever the distance may have been, because to that extent he failed to yield the right of way as required by RCW 46.60.170 [cf. Rem. Rev. Stat., Vol. 7A, § 6360-90]. See Geitzenauer v. Johnson (1931), 161 Wash. 444, 297 Pac. 174, another case in which one of the cars involved extended eighteen inches beyond its proper position. We would agree that there was contributory negligence as a matter of law on the part of respondent if it was conceded that the Cadillac was entirely on the blacktop at the moment of impact, for then such negligence would have been clearly a proximate cause of the collision, as in the Geitzenauer case, supra; but he indicated by his placing of the cars on a map that the right front of the Cadillac was off the blacktopped portion of the highway at the .moment of impact, so that the Chevrolet *533 would have been hit even though it had been entirely off the blacktop, in which event the fact that it projected a few inches over the blacktop would not have been a proximate cause of the collision as a matter of law.

The question of whether respondent’s admitted negligence was a proximate cause of the collision and hence constituted contributory negligence was for the jury, and that is exactly what was submitted to it by instruction No. 6, which charged that any violation of RCW 46.60.170, including failure to yield the right of way, would constitute negligence, and that if the jury found that such violation proximately caused the injuries or damages sustained by the respondent, his conduct constituted contributory negligence.

However, if the contributory negligence of Blackburn be conceded, his right of recovery was not barred, as he relied on the doctrine of last clear chance. What we have heretofore said indicates our belief that an instruction on that doctrine was entirely proper, and that appellant’s contention to the contrary is without merit. We agree, however, with the appellant that the second phase of the last clear chance doctrine, which deals with the situation where the defendant driver does not see, but should have seen, the peril of the plaintiff, was neither accurately stated nor applicable. Passing the question of the sufficiency of the exceptions taken to that instruction, the appellant could not be prejudiced thereby, inasmuch as she testified that she saw the respondent when his car was three feet or more onto the blacktop and that she had him in view at all times thereafter, during which time he backed entirely off the blacktop and then came suddenly forward directly in front of her in such a manner as made it impossible to avoid him. Since she saw him at all times, it was immaterial whether his negligence continued or terminated prior to the collision.

The giving of instruction No. 8 is also assigned as error, but we shall not discuss its substance, inasmuch as the exceptions taken did not call the trial court’s attention to the error now claimed, and the error, if there be any, *534 was not sufficiently patent to warrant a departure from our oft-reiterated rule that the exception must call the trial court’s attention to the claimed error in the instruction. Lasser v. Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Co. (1955), ante p. 408, 281 P. (2d) 832.

Nor do we find error in the admission, over objection, of a signed account by the respondent’s witness,.Harold G. Hes-son, giving his account of the collision.

Appellant’s counsel, on cross-examination, had asked Hesson concerning something contained in a signed statement taken from him shortly after the collision. Hesson admitted that the matter inquired about which was inconsistent with his testimony was in the statement he had signed. The appellant could not then have offered the statement in evidence under the rule which she now invokes, because, as we have frequently held, in accordance with the generally recognized rules of evidence, if a witness admits he made the contradictory statement, the impeachment is complete and no further evidence thereof is necessary or admissible. Quayle v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P.2d 115, 46 Wash. 2d 529, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackburn-v-groce-wash-1955.