Colwell v. Nygaard

112 P.2d 838, 8 Wash. 2d 462
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1941
DocketNo. 28288.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 112 P.2d 838 (Colwell v. Nygaard) 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
Colwell v. Nygaard, 112 P.2d 838, 8 Wash. 2d 462 (Wash. 1941).

Opinions

Beals, J.

The plaintiff, Hiram M. Colwell, instituted two actions against Kenneth G. Nygaard, seeking recovery of damages suffered by reason of the death of plaintiff’s minor daughter, Edith F. Colwell, who died January 3, 1940, as the result of injuries which she received four days previously, when she was struck by an automobile owned and operated by defendant. In one action plaintiff sued individually; in the other as administrator of his daughter’s estate. The actions were heard together, and were tried to the court sitting without a jury, the court refusing to allow any recovery in favor of plaintiff as administrator, but entering findings of fact and conclusions of law in plaintiff’s favor in the other action, followed by a judgment in plaintiff’s favor in the sum of $1,862.50, from which judgment defendant has appealed.

Error is assigned upon the admission of the evidence of one witness, over appellant’s objection; upon the denial of appellant’s motion for a nonsuit; and upon the denial of appellant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. Appellant also assigns error upon the refusal of the court to enter judgment in his favor; and upon the denial of his motion for a new trial.

No question concerning the denial by the trial court of the right of respondent as administrator to recover against appellant is presented on this appeal.

*464 The facts of the case may be summarized as follows: Edith F. Colwell, of the age of eighteen years and ten months, was residing with her parents in or near the city of Ellensburg. She was an outstanding young woman, mentally and physically, a devoted daughter, and enjoyed the respect and affection of her associates. She was in attendance on the Central Washington College of Education, at Ellensburg.

About three o’clock, or a little later, on the afternoon of December 30, 1939, Miss Colwell and four of her girl friends were proceeding south along a road which extends north from the limits of the city of Ellensburg. The road sloped down toward the south at a grade varying from 2.78 to 4 per cent. The ground was covered with snow to a depth of from four to six inches, and the road along which the girls were walking had been cleared for traffic, both vehicular and pedestrian, to a width of from ten to twelve feet, leaving the snow undisturbed on both sides of the cleared roadway. The road was not paved, but had a hard surface, upon which remained some snow and ice, the snow being soft and slushy, the temperature being a little above freezing. The girls were walking along the roadway, five abreast, occupying practically all of the space between the undisturbed snow on either side. Their names and their positions in the line as they were walking south were as follows: Barbara DeGraves was on the east, or left, of the line, Nadine Cargo was next, Edith Colwell next, then Irma Klampher, and Helen Michaels on the extreme right. The afternoon was cloudy, but there was no precipitation, and the visibility was good.

The girls were walking leisurely, and in the course of time an automobile came along, to which they yielded the right of way, by withdrawing from the open portion of the road. They then resumed their *465 way, in the same order as before. Appellant’s automobile then appeared upon the scene, coming from the north behind the girls, and proceeding south. When appellant was at least four hundred feet distant from the girls he saw them clearly, and they were aware of his approach, one of the girls remarking that a car was coming. Appellant, who had been driving at thirty miles an hour or a little more, when he approached the girls as near as approximately one hundred sixty feet, materially diminished his speed. At about this time, one of the girls again remarked that the automobile was coming closer.

As the car came within about eighty feet of the pedestrians, the two girls who were on the-right of the line, the Misses Klampher and Michaels, stepped from the open roadway and walked in the snow on the westerly side of the road. Miss DeGraves, who was on the extreme left, also stepped into the snow and continued walking. This left Miss Cargo and Miss Colwell in the road, the latter in approximately the middle of the cleared roadway, Miss Cargo to her left in the easterly half of the road. Miss Cargo then left the road, proceeding to her left into the snow. Miss Colwell attempted to avoid the automobile, as found by the trial court, by moving rapidly forward and to her right, in a diagonal direction, toward the westerly margin of the road, but was struck by the right front bumper and fender of the car, suffering injuries from which she died a few days later.

The trial court found that the deceased, knowing of the near approach of the car, was negligent in remaining in the roadway, but that appellant had ample opportunity and the last clear chance to avoid striking her, and that, for this reason, appellant should be held to respond in damages.

Appellant and the girls were well acquainted, and *466 appellant was thoroughly familiar with the road and its then condition, having driven over it only a short time before the accident. The road was unoccupied, save for the girls and appellant’s car.

Appellant stood upon his motion for a nonsuit and his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, introducing no evidence thereafter.

The open surface of the road was slippery, and there is in the record testimony to the effect that appellant’s tires were smooth and that his brakes were not of the best.

Appellant was called as a witness by respondent, and testified at considerable length concerning the accident. He stated that he at no time gave any horn signal, testifying that he knew that the girls were aware of the approach of his car, as he saw at least two of them look back. He stated that he gradually reduced his speed, and at the time he struck Miss Col-well, was going at fifteen or sixteen miles per hour, along his right hand side of the road. Testifying as to what happened just prior to the accident, appellant stated that he saw Miss Cargo take Miss Colwell’s hand, and with her start to their left, and that when he was within three or four feet of the two girls, Miss Colwell sprang back in front of his car, and was struck by the right hand side of the bumper and fell back over the right fender, falling to the side of the road within a very few feet from the place she was struck. Other testimony was to the effect that the girl was carried on the front of the car twenty-three feet or more.

Appellant testified that he applied his brakes some eight feet back of the point of collision, but his car skidded forward, and that he released his brakes after the girl fell to the ground. He stated that Miss Colwell was well to his left, in a position of safety, and that his *467 car would not have struck her had she not cut back to her right in front of the car.

The injured girl had no recollection whatever of the accident, nor of events which occurred immediately prior thereto.

The testimony of Nadine Cargo, who was walking along the road next to Miss Colwell, on the latter’s left, is extremely important.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P.2d 838, 8 Wash. 2d 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colwell-v-nygaard-wash-1941.