Clark v. City of Bremerton

97 P.2d 112, 1 Wash. 2d 689, 1939 Wash. LEXIS 405
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
DocketNo. 27655.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 112 (Clark v. City of Bremerton) 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
Clark v. City of Bremerton, 97 P.2d 112, 1 Wash. 2d 689, 1939 Wash. LEXIS 405 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs to recover for the death of their minor son, Lyle Aubrey Clark, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, city of Bremerton. At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, the court granted the defendant’s motion for nonsuit and entered a judgment dismissing the action with prejudice. Plaintiffs appeal.

May 19, 1938, the water department of the respondent city was engaged in excavating a trench along the side of one of its streets preliminary to the installation of a water main. The crew employed on the trench worked a six-hour day, or until two-thirty or three o’clock in the afternoon. It was the city’s practice to place lighted flare pots along the excavation at the close of the day’s work to warn users of the street of the danger incident to the open trench.

Sometime between five-thirty and six o’clock, on the *691 afternoon of the 19th, after the crew had ceased work and the lighted flare pots had been set, three of the appellants’ children, Lyle, the deceased, ten years and nine months of age, a younger sister, and Arley, a brother, fourteen, together with Loren Hooper, were playing in the trench at a point where it was about three and a half feet deep. Lyle reached out of the ditch and drew one of the lighted flare pots towards him so that he could melt some tar in the flame. Some of the kerosene escaped from the pot, ignited, and set fire to the boy’s clothing, causing the burns that resulted in his death. Arley Clark, the deceased’s older brother, describing the accident, testified as follows:

“Q. Just tell the jury what happened. A. Well, he went and tipped the smudge pot. ... He tipped the smudge pot over a little ways and then the oil went down on the side, and he did that once, and he was successful, and the second time the top blew off and he caught fire. Q. Why do you say the top blew off? A. Well, I imagine it was the top because it was a big Puff! and it just went right in his face. . . . Q. . . . Show the jury what your brother did. A. Well, he was about down like this and he tipped it over just a little ways and then he took hold of the chain and he had a rock here and he tipped it over like that, and then the oil ran out on the side and then it started blazing. Q. And then what happened again? A. Well, he did it the second time, and then . . . He used two rocks this time, and instead he tipped it like this, and it went and puffed in his face. . . . Q. Did it make any noise? A. No, it just went Puff! —like that, sort of. Q. Did you see where the fire caught him? A. Yes, it hit him in front, about here, all over on his head. . . . Q. Now, did he say anything to you before he tipped it over? A. Well, the first time he never said nothing. He was just tipping it over. And then the second time he says, ‘Look, Arley, look what I can do,’ and then he went and started to fix it and then he went and looked .to see if I was looking, and he tipped it.”

*692 On cross-examination, Arley testified:

“Q. And the ditch came up about where on Lyle? A. Right in about the neck. Q. And did he have a rock in both hands? A. He did the second time, but not the first. Q. Well, now, what did he do the first? A. Well, he took hold of it like this and had a rock here, and then he tipped it over twice. He pulled it over like this. Q. And how long did he leave it over? Did he leave it tipping over a while? A. Oh, about five seconds, I guess. Q. Long enough for quite a bit of liquid to run out of it? A. Oh, -not so very much. Just enough for it to run out on the side. Q. Did it run down to the ground? A. No, I couldn’t say that it did. Q. And then did it catch fire? A. Yes. Q. All that that had run out caught fire? A. Yes. The Court: The first time? A. Yes. Q. And was that the time when he said then, he said, ‘See what I can do’? A. Yes. Q. And then what did he do that time? A. Well, he took two rocks, one rock like this, and then one back there, and he tipped it that way.”

Later, the witness was interrogated by the court as follows:

“Q. Arley, just so the record will show:—I don’t know whether it does or not—your brother was down in the ditch, pulling the flare towards—twisting it,— turning it, tipping it right toward him? A. Yes. Q. Is that correct? A. Yes. Q. And now after he caught fire, the flare went back in the position that it is now? A. Well, it never went in the same position, but it was almost in the same. Q. It was almost straight up? A. Yes, it was straight up, but it was not in the same place, I mean. Q. Well, it was straight up? A. Yes.”

Loren Hooper, about the same age as the deceased, testified:

“Q. . . . Tell these people here—that is the jury— just tell how it happened and what you saw. . . . A. He was melting the tar and it was about eight inches away from the side of the ditch, and he pulled *693 it half way over and then started to melt the tar and it came over the rest of the way and hit the side of the ditch and then it exploded. Q. Why do you say it exploded? A. Because when it hit the side of the ditch it went Puff! like that. Q. What do you mean, a flame or—it went out like that? Pff! A. No, it was a flame. Q. A flame. Where was Lyle with reference to it when that puff came out? A. He was right in front.”

No watchman was maintained on the trench while the work was in progress, and the city admits knowledge of the fact that children were accustomed to play in the street.

While the report cards of the school attended by the deceased show that he did not hold a high rating in his studies, his father testified that he was of average intelligence for his age. He had been cautioned by his parents the day before the accident to keep away from the lighted flares.

The appellants’ assignments of error raise the basic question whether the evidence produced by them was sufficient to make a prima facie case, requiring submission of the issues of negligence and contributory negligence to the jury.

They first urge, with great earnestness, that the city is chargeable with negligence under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

Both appellants and respondent cite an article in the Washington Law Review, Vol. XIII, p. 215, in which the decisions of this court and the courts of other jurisdictions bearing upon the doctrine are collated and reviewed. The author states two rules, deducible from the authorities, which we think applicable here. One rule is to the effect that,

“Where the injury was the result of the way in which the instrumentality was used, then, if the plaintiff was *694 the actor, control was in him, and res ipsa loquitur will obviously be inapplicable.”

The other is that,

“Once the actual cause of the injury is established beyond controversy, of course, whether by the plaintiff or by the defendant, no presumptions will be involved.”

Whether or not the respondent was negligent in maintaining the lighted flares, under the circumstances of the case, is a question we shall later discuss.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 112, 1 Wash. 2d 689, 1939 Wash. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-city-of-bremerton-wash-1939.