Brown v. Washington Water Power Co.

181 P. 47, 106 Wash. 649, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1029
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1919
DocketNo. 15156
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 P. 47 (Brown v. Washington Water Power 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
Brown v. Washington Water Power Co., 181 P. 47, 106 Wash. 649, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1029 (Wash. 1919).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This is a personal injury case. Plaintiff, Loretta Brown, claimed she was injured through the negligence of defendant. Defendant denied negligence on its part and alleged her injuries were caused by her own fault. The cause was tried by a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s case, an unsuccessful challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to entitle plaintiff to any judgment was made by defendant. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of plaintiff, and answers to five special interrogatories as follows:

“Q. State whether or not the motorman sounded his gong when approaching the plaintiff. And if so, for how great a distance? A. One and a half blocks or 450 feet.
“Q. State whether or not the plaintiff looked or listened for an approaching car at any point east of Magnolia street. A. Yes.
“Q. State whether the plaintiff when crossing Napa street was walking in the north track or in the space between the two tracks. A. Between the two tracks.
“Q. Did plaintiff at any point east of Magnolia street take any precaution to avoid a collision with the car on the south track? A. Yes.
“Q. If you answer the last question in the affirma-’ tive, state what precaution she so took. A. By looking back.”

Thereupon defendant moved for a judgment non obstante, on the law, evidence, and answers to the special interrogatories. The motion was granted, a judgment of dismissal entered, and plaintiff has appealed.

[651]*651Appellant was a high school girl, between seventeen and eighteen years of age, and was injured about 2 o’clock in the afternoon, on Illinois avenue, in Spokane, by a moving car operated by respondent. The avenue runs in an easterly and westerly direction along the top of a bluff above the river to the south. The Great Northern Railway track parallels the avenue, its track being along the side of the bluff, fifteen to twenty feet below the surface of the avenue. Streets running from the north down into the avenue near the place where the collision occurred, in their order going from west to east, are Madelia, Pittsburg, Magnolia, Napa and Crestline. The blocks between these last-named streets front three hundred feet on the avenue, except the one between Napa and Crestline streets, which has a front of five or six hundred feet. The car line is a double-track system, the tracks being five feet or more apart, running along the avenue, which is straight and level from a point several blocks west of Madelia street, thence eastward to Crestline street where it turns north.

Ordinarily, on the north side of the avenue where the accident occurred, next to the property line, there was a well-beaten path, which disputed testimony showed to be difficult of travel on the day in question because of gravel, earth, lumber and debris thrown about in the construction of a city sewer just north of and paralleling the north track of the car line. There was no sidewalk or pathway along the south side of the avenue on the edge of the bluff. There were no obstructions on either of the car tracks or the space between them from a point several blocks west of Madelia street to Crestline street. Appellant had been living on Madelia street, near the avenue, for some time, and was accustomed to taking the avenue [652]*652street cars to her school. She had frequently walked along this portion of the avenue, and was familiar with the location of the car tracks and the fact that street cars were operated thereon—the south track being used by cars going east, the other track by cars going west. At the time in question, she came south from her home on Madelia street to the north sidewalk line of the avenue, turned east, walked in a beaten pathway nearly two blocks, crossed Pittsburg street to a point near Magnolia street, then dropped down into the space between the two car tracks. She testified that at this place she looked in each direction, saw no car, and that afterwards she paid no more attention to the street cars and saw or heard none. She walked rapidly towards the east between the car tracks, crossed Magnolia street and on to a point about one hundred feet beyond Napa street, when she was struck on the right side of her head and hip by the left front of the street car going in the same direction, on the south car track.

On the other hand, the motorman testified that, in approaching her, he continuously sounded the gong of the car, commencing at a distance of a block and a half before striking her. The jury so found. He further testified that, when his car was about a block from where the collision occurred, while he was ringing the gong, “she turned around and looked down the street, and she turned back and kept on walking. ’ ’ This evidence satisfied the jury, notwithstanding her testimony to the contrary; for, by answers to special interrogatories, the jury found she looked tack when she was at a point east of Magnolia street. All the witnesses on both sides who testified on the subject agreed that twenty-five to thirty feet before striking appellant the motorman reversed the car by its emer[653]*653gency appliance, and stopped it about twenty-five feet after striking the girl, who- fell to the side and just in front of tbe rear trucks of the street car. At the time of tbe accident, a train of freight cars was running alongside on the Great Northern Railway'track in the same direction the street car was going.

By the traffic ordinance of the city the maximum speed at which street cars were allowed to be run in the residence portion of the city was fifteen miles per hour. Concerning the speed of the car, one of appellant’s witnesses, a passenger, on being asked if he could tell the rate of speed at which the car was going when the girl was struck, answered: “Well, I would say at least twenty miles an hour, possibly a little more,-” but on cross-examination he said:

“I did not state to the agent that I was unable to state at what rate of speed the car was running. I cannot state accurately. I am not an expert on rate of speed although I have ridden on trains, street cars., and automobiles. I never ran an automobile. I was never a street car conductor or motorman. I never timed a street car.”

The other witnesses estimated the speed of the car at from five to fourteen miles per hour until the reverse was thrown on. Several of the witnesses testified that the speed of the car was gradually reduced after commencing to sound the gong. During all of the time appellant was on the avenue, prior to the accident, there was no street car upon the north track.

The different situations, one shading into something unlike the others, presented by the cases on the subject of personal injuries, with their resultant rules and determinations, suggest at once that the chief concern in deciding the average case of this sort is not so much to- discover some well-established rule or principle, but to keep well in mind the facts in the case at [654]*654hand, so as to properly apply such rules. This is not a street-crossing case where the motorman must have in mind those already in view and expect others to come into danger of his car at any moment; but a situation in front of a long city block with a single pedestrian in view, both going in the same direction, their lines not crossing nor even converging, each cognizant of the other’s movements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 P. 47, 106 Wash. 649, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-washington-water-power-co-wash-1919.