Devore v. Longview Public Service Co.

298 P. 717, 162 Wash. 338, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1020
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1931
DocketNo. 22909. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 298 P. 717 (Devore v. Longview Public Service 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
Devore v. Longview Public Service Co., 298 P. 717, 162 Wash. 338, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1020 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Millard, J.

Alleging that Rolla DeVore was struck by a bus of the defendant and sustained injuries resulting in his death, the administratrix of the decedent’s estate instituted this action to recover therefor. Defendant’s motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict were denied, and the cause was submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict for five thousand dollars in favor of the plaintiff. From the judgment entered on the verdict, motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial having been overruled, the defendant appealed.

About seven-thirty o’clock the morning of September 5, 1929, Rolla DeVore was either struck by or stepped into the way of a passenger bus of the defend *339 ant near Longview. The injuries received in that accident resulted in DeVore’s death a few days later.

DeVore was walking in a southerly direction on or alongside the paved portion, which is twenty feet wide, of a public highway near Longview. A passenger bus of appellant was being driven in a northerly direction on that same highway. That is, the bus was on its right or east side of the highway and DeVore was walking towards the bus on the same side, or the deceased’s left (east) side, of the highway. The testimony on the part of appellant was to the effect that DeVore was walking off the pavement when the bus driver first saw him; that he was about three or four feet off of the pavement on his left-hand side or the appellant’s right-hand side.

"When DeVore got close to the bus, he was looking around — looking over his left shoulder; he took a few steps forward while looking back, and when he turned his head around towards the front he was about opposite the radiator on the bus; and when he looked around he stepped on to the pavement and into the side of the bus, coming in contact with the door of the bus, breaking the glass in the door. The bus driver was positive in his testimony that DeVore stepped on to the pavement when he struck the bus. When picked up, immediately following the accident, DeVore was lying partially on and partially off the pavement. One witness testified:

“His feet was on the pavement; from his knees down was on the pavement, and the rest of his body was lying on the gravel.”

Respondent’s principal witness, a Mr. Rehberg, testified that DeVore was lying at the extreme front end of the bus: “He just slid off as the truck swerved to the left.” Appellant’s bus driver testified that he applied his brakes when DeVore started towards the *340 pavement, just before DeVore stepped into and collided with the bns; that the bns swerved to the left and traveled ten or twelve feet before it stopped; that Mr. DeVore was lying about even with (or' opposite) the front wheel of the bns.

It is respondent’s position that, as the bus came around the curve, and as it approached DeVore, the right front wheel ran off of the pavement on to the unpaved portion of the highway on which the deceased was walking, and struck him; that the bus, which was traveling at a speed of forty miles an hour, then turned slightly to the left on to the pavement and stopped, traveling thirty-five feet after it struck De-Vore; that DeVore was picked up by the bus as it struck him; that he then fell off, struck the ground and was found with his feet and legs up to his knees on the pavement at the east side, and the remainder of his body was just off of the pavement on the dirt shoulder of the highway.

Appellant insists there was no evidence to go to the jury showing that the appellant was guilty of any negligent act, and that the evidence affirmatively established the negligence of the deceased as the proximate cause of his death. It is contended it was essential to a recovery that the respondent produce testimony that the bus was off of the pavement at the time the de: ceased was struck; that were it not for the testimony of respondent’s witness, Mr. Rehberg, the evidence not only failed to show that the bus went off of the pavement, but it showed, and without contradiction, that, as the bus driver testified, the accident happened because DeVore stepped on to the pavement without looking; that Rehberg in reality testified that the bus was on the pavement when DeVore was hit; that the undisputed physical facts show that the bus was on the pavement at the point of impact, and, if it were ever *341 off of the pavement, it was so far back from the place of the collision as to have nothing to do with the accident.

The question presented is not one of conflict of evidence. If that were so, we would not disturb the verdict. The testimony of one witness is determinative of this appeal. There is no testimony, unless it be that of Mr. Rehberg, even tending to prove that the bus was driven off of the pavement and struck Mr. DeVore while he was walking on the unpaved portion of the highway, where he would have had a legal right to be. In the absence of the testimony of this witness, the evidence clearly establishes the fact that the bus was on the paved portion of the highway, where it was required to travel, and that, while the bus was so proceeding, Mr. DeVore stepped from the dirt shoulder of the highway onto the paved portion of the highway and collided with the right-hand side door of the bus, breaking the glass in the door.

If that be true, and without the evidence of Mr. Rehberg, that is the undisputed testimony, there is no showing of negligence on the part of the appellant. Mr. DeVore was either not looking where he was going, or he looked and did not see the bus. In either event Mr. DeVore’s negligence was the proximate cause of his injuries, and bars the right of recovery by the respondent. Herrett v. Puget Sound Tr. L. & P. Co., 103 Wash. 101, 173 Pac. 1024.

Mr. Rehberg testified on direct examination that he saw the accident; that he saw the deceased walking along the pavement

“. . . ahead of me about 100 feet. ... he was walking over to the side of the pavement, just about the same as I was; . . . Q. About how far off the pavement would you say? A. I judge a foot and a half or two feet. . . . there was a bus coming towards us. . . . I didn’t notice it in particular *342 until I heard the brakes go on, then just as the brakes went on I saw this man, whether it picked him up or what it done, I just happened to glance up when I heard the brakes go on and the bus kinda swerved a little bit to the left, the way he was traveling, to his left, and this man rolled kind of a half turn and fell with his feet right on the pavement and out to the left of it. Q. Was the bus on the pavement, or off of the pavement when you first saw it? A. The way it looked to me, my recollection is— Q. (Interrupting) In coming down to the turn there, did he leave the pavement? To the side the man was walking? A. Yes, he was coming towards us. Q. Did you observe the driver of the bus before the bus collided with the man? A. I couldn’t exactly say that because my attention was drawn to the man, you see; but from the way he came down there and picked this man up, why I don’t know what he was looking at. . . . Q. Then you say he turned slightly to the left when he struck the man? A. Yes, the bus turned to the left. Q. Did he stop? A.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P. 717, 162 Wash. 338, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devore-v-longview-public-service-co-wash-1931.