Dillabough v. Okanogan County

178 P. 802, 105 Wash. 609, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1025
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1919
DocketNo. 14898
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 P. 802 (Dillabough v. Okanogan County) 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
Dillabough v. Okanogan County, 178 P. 802, 105 Wash. 609, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1025 (Wash. 1919).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

The respondent, while a passenger in an automobile which was being driven over a public highway of the appellant county, received an injury, and brought this action against the county to recover in damages therefor. After issue joined, the action was tried by the court, sitting without a jury, and resulted in the entry of a judgment in the respondent’s favor in the sum of $1,653. From the judgment so entered, the county appeals.

The facts necessary to an understanding of the questions involved, as we gather them from the evidence, are in substance these: The highway on which the injury occurred is the principal highway leading from the town of Okanogan to the town of Conconully, and is a 'much traveled way. At a point some one and one-half miles from Okanogan, it crosses a creek known as Salmon Creek. This creek is a torrential stream with precipitous banks, drains a large area of country, and at times, particularly in the spring and early summer, carries a considerable volume of water under normal conditions. It is also subject to periodical freshets, at which times the volume is greatly increased.

As a road crossing over the creek, the county constructed a culvert. They placed a corrugated pipe, some thirty feet long and forty-eight inches in diam[611]*611eter in the bed of the stream and filled the remaining part of the channel for a width of about fifteen feet, up to a level with or perhaps slightly higher than the creek’s banks, with earth, gravel and loose stone. The culvert was constructed in the latter part of the year 1913. Prior thereto, the government of the United States had constructed, higher up on the stream, a storage basin for irrigation purposes, which it filled during the freshet seasons with water that would naturally flow down the creek. This reservoir seems to have absorbed the surplus water of the stream for a year or so previous to the erection of the culvert. In the freshet season of 1914, it was made evident, however, that it would not do so at all times, and it was made evident, also, that the pipe was inadequate. During that season, the water backed up in front of the pipe on a number of ■ occasions almost to the top of the banks of the creek, and on one occasion ran over the banks across the roadway and into the creek below the culvert, although the pipe was carrying water at the several times to its full capacity. The same thing happened in the freshet season of 1915. At that time, if not in 1914, the condition was called to the attention of the county officers and they were warned of the danger of the culvert being washed out. Indeed, the matter seems to have been a subject of discussion among them at one time, one of such officers, a deputy in the office of the county engineer, testifying:

“We talked about it; talked about the advisability of tearing it (the culvert) out and putting in another, putting in a larger one, but we came to the conclusion that it was just as well to let it stay there and the county could put in another one without the expense of tearing that one out; we said it was just a question of time when some flood would come along.”

[612]*612At about 9 o’clock in the evening of June 21, 1916, one Hubbard left Okanogan in an automobile to drive to Conconully. He was a mail carrier and carried the respondent as a passenger. The road leading from Okanogan to the crossing of the creek runs parallel to the course of the creek. As it approached the crossing, it made a rounding turn, so, that the lights of an automobile would not fall upon the crossing until the machine was almost directly upon it. The driver of the automobile testifies that he drove over the road at a moderate rate of speed and in a careful manner; that his automobile had chains upon the hind wheels; that its brake was in good condition and the lights thereon were burning brightly; that, as the automobile turned toward the culvert, it was discovered that it had partially washed out; that it was then too late to stop the automobile, although he made an effort so to do, and that the car was precipitated into the washout and turned over. It was at this place and from this circumstance that the respondent received the injuries for which she sues.

The evidence discloses, also, that the culvert had' been in a dangerous situation for some weeks immediately prior to the time it actually washed out. The pipe had again proved inadequate to carry the water. The water had, a number of times, risen close to the top of the banks of the creek, and had at one time overflowed the banks and passed over the roadway. It was regarded as dangerous by the people residing near it and by those who, from necessity, were required to use it. The county officers were notified of the situation, and the road foreman had been giving it some special attention, keeping the intake of the pipe free from drift and other debris. The foreman was obliged to leave the place about a week before the [613]*613washout occurred and left the matter in charge of others, but just what these others did during his absence seems not to be disclosed by the evidence. No barriers or lights or other warning signs were placed at the crossing prior to the accident, although a witness living on the creek, near the place, becoming alarmed at the rapidly rising water, started there for the purpose of putting up a light and was on his way when the accident happened.

In her complaint, the respondent charged the county with negligence in two respects: Negligence in the original construction of the culvert, and negligence in allowing it to remain in its unsafe condition after they had knowledge thereof, without giving the public warning of such condition. To substantiate the first ground of negligence alleged, the respondent called civil engineers, who were permitted, over the objection of the appellant, to give their opinions as to the sufficiency of the structure to accomplish the purposes intended; whether it was a reasonably safe structure within the knowledge the county had at the time of its construction or might have acquired by reasonable inquiry; and what would have been a proper structure.

The first error assigned is on the ruling of the court admitting this testimony. But, while it is probable that the witnesses in certain instances were permitted to go beyond the rule, we find nothing in it that requires a new trial, or a rendition of a judgment for the other side. As we have stated, the action was tried by the court sitting without a jury. It is thus triable" in this court de novo. (Rem. Code, § 1736.) The admission of inadmissible evidence in cases so tried is, therefore, not ground for a new trial. The appellate court can and will disregard the inadmissible evidence and try the issues submitted upon the evidence legiti[614]*614mately in the record. If it finds that the judgment must rest upon evidence not admissible, it will reverse the judgment rendered and direct a judgment for the other party. On the other hand, if it finds that the evidence preponderates in favor of the judgment, after disregarding the inadmissible evidence, it will affirm the judgment. Rohrer v. Snyder, 29 Wash. 199, 69 Pac. 748. Indeed, we have admonished trial courts, in the trial of causes without a jury, to be “liberal . . . in admitting evidence so that this court, in the event of an appeal, will on a trial de novo, have all material facts before it for consideration, and thus avoid the necessity of the cause being remanded for the admission of material evidence erroneously rejected.” Degginger v. Martin, 48 Wash. 1, 92 Pac. 674.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P. 802, 105 Wash. 609, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillabough-v-okanogan-county-wash-1919.