Everest v. Riecken

174 P.2d 762, 26 Wash. 2d 542, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 282
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1946
DocketNo. 29983.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 762 (Everest v. Riecken) 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
Everest v. Riecken, 174 P.2d 762, 26 Wash. 2d 542, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 282 (Wash. 1946).

Opinion

Mallery, J.

Appellants, Egbert E. Everest and Gladys Everest as a marital community, and Egbert E. Everest as guardian ad litem for his minor son, Jack Everest, brought this action to recover for personal injuries sustained by him in a collision between a bicycle ridden by him and an automobile owned by respondents as a family car, and driven by their minor son, James F. Riecken.

The cause was tried to the court sitting with a jury, but was dismissed at the close of respondents’ case upon a motion for a directed verdict. Appellants assign as error (1) dismissal of the action upon respondents’ motion challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, and (2) overruling of appellants’ motion for a new trial.

A motion for a directed verdict admits the truth of the plaintiffs’ evidence and all inferences reasonably to be drawn therefrom, and requires that the evidence be interpreted most strongly against the defendant and in the' light most favorable to the plaintiff. Billingsley v. Rovig-Temple Co., 16 Wn. (2d) 202, 133 P. (2d) 265.

So interpreted, the evidence established the following facts. The accident here in question occurred at 10:15 p. m. on July 15, 1941, just south of the intersection of Rucker avenue and 15th avenue in a residential district of the city of Everett. Rucker avenue is thirty-six feet wide between vertical curbs, is paved its full width, and extends in a north and south direction. Bisecting Rucker avenue are 14th avenue, 15th avenue, and 16th avenue, running east and west. The 15th avenue intersection is illuminated by a white light suspended over the center thereof by means of a cable attached to poles. The lot on the southwest corner of this intersection is occupied by Van’s grocery store, which extends southward along Rucker avenue forty-two and one-half feet from the southerly property line of 15th avenue. The front of this store was described as being “all *544 glass.” At the time of the accident, the aforementioned street lamp was burning, and there were one or two lights burning in Van’s store as the proprietor was counting his cash, but the front lights thereof had been extinguished. There is no evidence as to the intensity of any of the lights other than that the street light was “bright.” The night was dry, clear, and brightly moonlit. The pavement was dry.

No one witnessed the impact. Jack Everest testified that he remembered nothing concerning the crash nor the events immediately preceding it. On the other hand, neither James Riecken nor his fiancee, who was a passenger in his car, saw the bicycle before he struck it. The principal witness was George Varnell, a fourteen-year-old boy, who, until a moment before the impact, had been riding on the handlebars of Jack Everest’s bicycle. At the time of the impact, he was standing on the street, facing west, or away from the scene, with his right hand on the handlebars. He was not injured.

According to young Varnell, he and Jack Everest had been visiting with another boy on the east side of Rucker avenue between 14th and 15th. avenues. Shortly before 10:15 p. m., they had set out for Jack Everest’s home, which was located on the west side of Rucker avenue between 15th and 16th avenues. At a point in front of their friend’s house, they proceeded across Rucker avenue to the west portion of the pavement and there took a straight southerly course, riding seven or eight feet out from, or to the east of, the west curb.- When they reached a point sixty to seventy feet north of the 15th avenue intersection, they were passed three or four feet to their left by a car driven by Lester Jones, which was also proceeding south. As they reached the 15th avenue intersection, Varnell observed two things. He saw the Jones car pull over to the right and park at the west curb in front of Van’s store. Looking farther to the south, he observed that a bus, northbound on Rucker, had stopped at the southeast corner of the 16th avenue intersection, three hundred feet away, and was being passed by a northbound automobile, which later proved to be that of respondents.

*545 Varnell further testified that the respondents’ car was then to its left of the center of the avenue and appeared to be bearing down upon the bicycle at a speed of forty to forty-five miles an hour. According to Varnell, the bicycle continued its southerly course, passing to the left of the Jones car and so close to it that he could have touched it with his foot. As he and appellant came abreast of the Jones car, it appeared to Varnell that a collision with respondents’ automobile was imminent. Intending to warn appellant, he shouted “look out” twice in quick succession, and as soon as the front wheel of the bicycle passed the left front fender of the Jones car; he slid off the handlebars to a position of safety. The collision, in which Jack Everest suffered severe injuries, occurred immediately thereafter.

It does not appear where the bicycle ultimately landed. Jack Everest was found lying in the street in a pool of blood two or three feet forward of the left front bumper of the Jones car. Later that evening, police officers ascertained the location of the pool of blood as being seventy-one feet from the south curb line of 15th avenue and twelve feet to the east of the west curb of Rucker avenue. According to Officer Heum, the south property line on 15th avenue is twenty feet south of the curb line. The pool of blood with relation to Van’s store was therefore eight and one-half feet south of Van’s south wall. There were also several small blood spots a few feet to the south of the large pool. Six or seven feet south of the main blood spot and a small undetermined distance east thereof, the officers found a dust spot — “A hunk of dirt as they tear loose from the fender.”

Police examination of respondents’ automobile disclosed a dent approximately in the center of the left fender, blood on the left door hinge, and a small amount of flesh, blood, and hair adhering to the left door handle. Jones testified that after the crash he found blood spattered on most of the hood of his car, that the headlight, which was mounted inboard from the left front fender, was dented, that the fender itself was dented, and that the license plate previously mounted on the bumper below the headlight had been *546 completely tom off. The headlights of the Jones car were not burning at the time of the accident.

James Riecken and his fiancee testified that neither of them saw the bicycle until after he had stopped his car and got out to investigate. His explanation was that when his car had reached a point one half to two thirds of the way “from 16th to 15th avenues, he was partially blinded by the headlights of a southbound car which was pulling away from the west curb. The jury was not bound to believe this explanation if they did not choose to do so, but the respondents are bound by the admission that he did not see the bicycle.

It was admitted that the bicycle was not equipped with a headlight, nor was Jack Everest, at the time of the accident, carrying a light of any sort.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 762, 26 Wash. 2d 542, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everest-v-riecken-wash-1946.