Burns v. Dills

413 P.2d 370, 68 Wash. 2d 377, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 746
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1966
Docket37939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 413 P.2d 370 (Burns v. Dills) 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
Burns v. Dills, 413 P.2d 370, 68 Wash. 2d 377, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 746 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendant based on a jury verdict. The plaintiff, Donald B. Bums, is a surveyor who was struck by defendant’s automobile while he was working. The plaintiff will hereafter be referred to in this opinion as appellant, and the defendant will be referred to as respondent.

Appellant was in charge of a survey crew (crew chief) employed by the firm of Horton Dennis & Associates. On the day of the accident, January 30, 1962, the survey crew had been working in Renton in the vicinity of the “T” intersection of Eighth Avenue North and Garden Street from midmoming until the time of the accident which occurred at about two minutes before 4 p.m. They were taking boundary and elevation readings of a parcel of land on the southeast comer of the intersection and adjacent to the streets for the purpose of making a topography map to be used for feasibility studies and to obtain information preparatory to the construction of a parking lot for the Boeing Company. This parking lot was subsequently built in February and March of 1962.

The work of the crew during the day required the workmen to move the surveying instruments to the various parts of the parcel of land and the adjacent streets. They were not working at the place where the accident occurred until just shortly before it happened.

The particular work being done by the crew at the time of the accident was the location and marking of a point in Garden Street. The transit was set up on the north shoulder of Eighth Avenue North facing Garden Street. James Huber, a member of the survey crew, and a witness at trial, was operating the transit. The chain man, Charles Kantola, had already marked off the distance to the point to be set in Garden Street (60 feet from the transit), and had withdrawn the measuring tape from across Eighth Avenue North. Huber was sighting through the transit,, giving ap *380 pellant Burns, .'Who was standing in Garden Street, the proper angle, so that Burns could set the P-K nail (a small metal marker pin) at the proper point. Huber had positioned Burns facing north over a point 4.23 feet to the east of the unmarked center line (inside the northbound, lane) of Garden Street. Bums then crouched down preparatory to setting the P-K nail in the roadway within the unmarked pedestrian crosswalk.

There is a stop sign for northbound traffic on Garden Street immediately south of its intersection with Eighth Avenue North'. An automobile driven by Leslie Killings-worth had stopped about 25 feet south of appellant in the northbound lane of Garden Street, waiting for him to clear the crosswalk. He had been waiting there about two or three minutes for appellant to finish his work when the accident took place. He was an eyewitness to the accident, and stated that, although he did not know the traffic conditions on Eighth Avenue North just prior to the accident, no cars had passed him proceeding either north or south on Garden Street, during the time he was waiting for Burns to clear the crosswalk.

Respondent Dills worked at the Boeing Company and had finished his work shift for the day at 3:30 p.m. There was another shift of Boeing’s employees scheduled to leave the Boeing plant at 4 p.m. The parking lot in which Dills had parked his car was on the north side of Eighth Avenue North about one block east of Garden Street. As respondent left the parking lot and turned west on Eighth Avenue North, he noticed three or four cars ahead of him, the nearest being about two car lengths in front of his car and the farthest about one block ahead. He testified that he believes that all but one of the cars went straight west on Eighth Avenue North past the intersection with Garden Street, and that only one car turned south into Garden Street. The car immediately in front of respondent apparently proceeded west on Eighth Avenue North. There were cars angle-parked on the north side of Eighth Avenue North so that cars traveling west necessarily straddled the unmarked center line of Eighth Avenue North.

*381 When respondent’s car reached about three car lengths from the point where he intended to make his turn into Garden Street, the sun, which was low in the sky, shone brightly in his eyes as the fog momentarily cleared from in front of him. The day had been intermittently overcast, with occasional bright, sunny periods. Respondent did not use his sun visor or his hand to shield the sun from his eyes. He did not see appellant, who was then crouched on the crosswalk in the northbound lane of Garden Street. He was traveling at about 15 m.p.h. as he made the turn. Respondent admits that he cut the corner of Garden Street in the process of making his left turn from Eighth Avenue North into the southbound (west) lane of Garden Street. His car passed to the east' of the unmarked center line of Garden Street at the place where he entered it.

Just before the impact of Dills’ automobile with appellant, the latter looked up in response to shouted warnings, and tried almost instantaneously to jump to the east out of the way. He had moved, at most, about 2 feet, toward the east edge of Garden Street when Dills’ car first struck him in the face and head with its left front fender just level with the front hood line.

At the time the accident occurred, appellant was wearing regular work clothes and a red hat. There was no safety cones placed in Eighth Avenue North or in Garden Street. There was no flagman operating in the area nor were there any signs warning of the presence of a survey crew in the area. The surface of the street on which appellant was crouched was a few inches lower than the center crown of Eighth Avenue North from which respondent was executing his left turn. There were no cars or other obstructions which required respondent to pass to the east of the center of Garden Street before entering the southbound (west) lane of Garden Street. Respondent’s own testimony on this subject is as follows:

Q. Could you have swung further out to the right or the west and made a proper turn at that time and place? A. Yes, but it would have been a little difficult. Q. But you could have? A. Yes. Q. Was it your custom to cut *382 this comer? [Objected to as immaterial — sustained by the trial court.] Q. ... If there had been a car stopped for the stop sign, heading in a northerly direction, could you have easily gotten around that by turning and coming down on your westerly portion of Garden Street? A. I think so.

Barton Dailey, a Renton police officer, who was called to the scene of the accident, arrived after both respondent’s car and appellant himself had been removed from the scene. Officer Dailey testified as to the conditions at the time he viewed the scene. He stated that cars were angle-parked on the north side of Eighth Avenue North so that a car traveling west on that street must necessarily straddle the unmarked center line. He was asked by respondent’s counsel to give his opinion as to the “ease” or “difficulty” in entering the southbound lane of Garden Street without cutting the comer when making a left turn. Appellant’s counsel objected that such a question was “going into the province of the jury” and “immaterial,” and was a matter concerning which the jury did not need and should not have expert opinion. The trial court agreed and sustained the objection.

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Bluebook (online)
413 P.2d 370, 68 Wash. 2d 377, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-dills-wash-1966.