Bowers v. Standard Fuel & Ice Co.

157 P. 1094, 91 Wash. 400, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1077
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1916
DocketNo. 13070
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 P. 1094 (Bowers v. Standard Fuel & Ice 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
Bowers v. Standard Fuel & Ice Co., 157 P. 1094, 91 Wash. 400, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1077 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Main, J.

The purpose of this action was to recover damages for personal injuries, alleged to be chargeable to the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was a little girl, approximately eight years old, and brings the action by her guardian ad litem. The trial of the cause resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $4,000. Motion for a new trial being made and presented, the trial court entered an order directing that the plaintiff elect to remit $1,000 from the amount of the verdict, and if this were not done, a new trial would be ordered. Thereafter the plaintiff elected to take a judgment for the sum of $3,000, which was entered. From this judgment, the defendant appeals.

The facts, which are either not in dispute or from the evidence the jury had a right to find, are substantially these: On July 22, 1914, the appellant was engaged in the business of selling and delivering ice in the city of Spokane. For this purpose a wagon drawn by two horses and accompanied by two men was used. The wagon was covered, and the sides of the box were approximately five feet high and eight feet long. In the rear of the wagon there was a tail gate about eight or ten inches high. The wagon bed set upon springs. At the back end of the wagon there was a step bolted to the frame. This step was about two and one-half feet long, and approximately fifteen inches wide.

On the morning of the day mentioned, before starting on the forenoon deliveries, the wagon was loaded by the two men in charge with nine cakes of ice, each cake being about [402]*402three and one-half feet long, twenty-two inches wide, ten inches thick, and weighing about three hundred pounds. In loading the wagon, six cakes were set crosswise of the bed on edge, and two were put on the end gate. Then about two-thirds of a cake, which had been broken, was laid in the front end of the wagon on top of the other ice. The other one-third of the broken cake was put in the back end on the ice that was leaning on the end gate. With the wagon thus loaded, the morning deliveries were begun.

During the course of the forenoon, while the regular deliveries were being made, the wagon passed through an alley in the rear of the plaintiff’s home. Either some place in this alley, or just before entering it, a stop had been made for the purpose of delivering ice to a customer. After the men had gotten upon the seat preparatory to starting, and without their knowledge, the plaintiff and a little boy about the same age got upon the wagon and seated themselves upon the step at the rear. The wagon passed through the alley with the horses going at a slow trot. As it passed from the alley into the street, as one witness described it, there was a “go down and go up.” After reaching the street, which was graded but not paved, the wagon turned south.

About the time the wagon passed from the alley into the street, the little boy jumped off. The plaintiff remained until the wagon had gotten a short distance into the street, when she left the step of the wagon and started for her home, having taken a few steps, and having traveled approximately five or six feet, when the two hundred pound piece of ice which had been placed upon the other ice in the front of the wagon slid out of the wagon and struck her on the inside of the left leg, breaking the smaller bone and fracturing the larger. The flesh of the leg was cut to the bone from a point about four inches above the ankle to a little below.

When the ice cake was placed on top of the other ice at the time of loading, there was sufficient frost in it so that it would have a tendency to freeze and hold its place. The [403]*403wagon passing over the rough ground would have a tendency to shake it loose. At the time of the accident, the two pieces of ice which had been set against the tail gate had been consumed in the deliveries made up to that time, with the exception of about one hundred and fifty pounds. When these cakes were placed in that position in the full size, they operated to prevent the ice from sliding out of the wagon. At the time of the accident, there was nothing to prevent the cake of ice laying on top in front, if it should be jarred loose, from sliding out of the wagon to the rear.

In the trial court, the appellant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence and moved the court for a directed verdict. This motion was denied. The cause was submitted to the jury, and a verdict returned as above indicated.

The first question is whether the defendant was negligent in loading the ice wagon with the two hundred pound piece on top in front, and then driving the wagon over rough ground in such a manner that it would be shaken loose and slide out of the rear. The driver knew the condition of the alley and the approach to the street over which he had driven just prior to the accident, having frequently passed that way. He knew also that the shaking of the wagon might cause the ice cake to loosen and slide out. He further knew that, if the cake did slide out, it might hit a person properly on the street and cause injury.

It cannot well be held, as a matter of law, that the defendant was not negligent. Whether reasonable care had been exercised, and whether such an accident as occurred might be reasonably anticipated as the probable result of loading and driving the wagon in the manner stated, were for the jury to determine.

The next question is whether a recovery can be had even though there was negligence on the part of the appellant. It will be assumed, but not decided, that if the respondent was upon the step at the rear of the wagon at the time she was hit by the ice cake, and was thus a trespasser, under no [404]*404theory of the law could there be a recovery, in the absence of wanton or willful injury. In this case there is no evidence from which wanton or willful injury could be inferred.

There was evidence that the respondent, at the time she was struck by the ice cake, had gotten off of the step, had started for home, with her back towards the wagon, and had gone a few steps, five or six feet, when the ice cake slid out of the wagon and struck her. There was evidence which would controvert this and tend to show that she was on the step at the time she was struck. The fact that she was a trespasser while upon the step would not deprive her, as a matter of law, of the right to recover if her status as a traveler had been resumed.

There has been something said relative to the physical facts showing that respondent must have been hit while upon the step. Whether the cake of ice in sliding out would drop upon the step, or would shoot out some distance behind and hit the ground, would depend upon its weight and momentum, together with what influence the road and the wagon may .have had upon it. There is no physical law by which it can be determined under the facts in this case whether the ice cake would necessarily drop upon the step, or whether it would shoot out behind some distance. One witness testified that if the ice slid with much speed, it would likely hit the ground five or six feet from the wagon.

Whether the respondent, at the time of the injury, was a trespasser upon the step, or whether her status was that of a traveler upon the street, was for the jury to determine. In Jaehnig v. Ferguson & Co., 197 Mass. 364, 83 N. E. 868, the plaintiff, a boy ten years of age, was run over and injured on one of the public streets of Boston by a delivery wagon in charge of one of the defendant’s employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P. 1094, 91 Wash. 400, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-standard-fuel-ice-co-wash-1916.