Ferguson v. City of Seattle

176 P.2d 445, 27 Wash. 2d 55, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 255
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1947
DocketNo. 29875.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 P.2d 445 (Ferguson v. City of Seattle) 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
Ferguson v. City of Seattle, 176 P.2d 445, 27 Wash. 2d 55, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 255 (Wash. 1947).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict in a personal injury case. It might well be called a borderline case were it not for the fact that the principal question involved lies in a field wherein there is no defined border line. That question is: Was the verdict arrived at through legitimate inference from evidence or by mere speculation? That is one of the most difficult questions which can be presented to an appellate court, since, in the absence of a definite boundary between these two methods of arriving at a conclusion, what one man classifies as legitimate inference is very apt to be regarded by another as mere speculation.

The preliminary facts are clearly established: Mrs. Ferguson, who, throughout, will be referred to as though she were the only plaintiff and respondent, was run down and very severely injured by a Seattle municipal bus on December 27, 1944, somewhere near the southeast corner of Fourth avenue and Jackson street.

For some months she had been employed by a fur company located in the Roosevelt 'hotel at Seventh avenue and Pine street. Her husband was employed at a steel works some distance south of the point where the accident occurred. The Fergusons lived in West Seattle. It had been the custom of Mr. Ferguson to drive his wife a part of the *57 way to her work. He ordinarily took her north on Fourth avenue as far as Jackson street. She then alighted at the southeast corner of the intersection and waited for the northbound Fourth avenue bus, while her husband turned right and went east on Jackson street to Fifth avenue, there again turned right and drove south on his way to his place of employment.

On the morning of the accident, it was impossible to follow the route above described. Fifth avenue was closed to traffic because of street repairs. It was necessary for Ferguson to turn left on Jackson street and get back to Fourth avenue by again turning left at the Second avenue extension. He could not discharge his wife at her bus stop, since, as hé was going to turn to the left, he was compelled to remain in the left-hand traffic lane and, therefore, could not pull over to the right-hand curb. Mrs. Ferguson alighted on the north sidewalk of Jackson street after her husband made the left turn. She testified in this action that she had no recollection whatever of anything that happened thereafter, nor until she became conscious in Providence hospital. We may here say, parenthetically, that there was ample medical evidence to the effect that this was entirely possible.

Although the time interval is not established, shortly after the plaintiff got out of her husband’s car, she was lying in Jackson street twenty-one or twenty-seven feet easterly of the east line of the Fourth avenue east crosswalk, and from four to six feet from the south sidewalk line of Jackson street, with the right front wheel of a city bus resting on one of her legs, her head pointing southerly and away from the bus. The testimony as to how she got there and when she got there is extremely vague and uncertain. It is plain that, to reach her bus stop, there were open to her two different routes of equal length. She could cross Jackson street on the west Fourth avenue crosswalk and then cross Fourth avenue itself on the Jackson street south crosswalk, or go east across Fourth and south across Jackson. It is contended that she took the latter course, and that contention is wholly founded upon the following testi *58 mony, and no other. After testifying that her husband let her out on the north side of Jackson street just west of Fourth avenue, she testified as follows:

“Q. What were you going to do then, Mrs. Ferguson? A. I was going to catch a bus. Q. Going in which direction? A. I was going to cross Fourth Avenue, going east, and then Jackson Street, going south. Q. And you were going to get the bus where? A. Right by the depot.” (Italics ours.)

Almost immediately after so testifying, she further testified as follows:

“Q. Tell the jury what happened so far as you know? A. I got out of our car. Q. Do you remember anything after that? A. No, I do not.”

Still later, while under cross-examination, she testified:

“Q. After you got out of the car on the northwest corner of Fourth and Jackson you have no recollection of anything until you awoke in the hospital, is that right? A. That is right. Q. You don’t remember crossing to the east, crossing Fourth Avenue to the east? A. No. Q. Or starting across Jackson Street to the south? A. No.”

It is said in respondent’s brief:

“The wife testified that upon leaving the automobile it was her intention to walk from the Northwest corner of 4th and Jackson to the Northeast corner, and then to the Southeast corner to the bus stop where she would catch her bus. She has no recollection, however, of anything that occurred after she left the automobile. But her husband testified that as he was about to re-enter 4th Avenue South from 2nd Avenue Extension, he looked back and saw his wife at the northeast corner of 4th and Jackson and saw her ‘starting across the intersection! ” (Italics ours.)

Presumably, respondent’s counsel made that same contention upon the argument of the city’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; for the court’s memorandum opinion denying the motion is made a part of the record, and in it we find the following statement:

“The husband testified that as he proceeded, he looked back and saw his wife leaving the north curb at the northeast corner to proceed across Jackson Street on the east *59 line of Fourth Avenue South; that it was about eight o’clock at the time she left his automobile.”

We are unable to reach that conclusion from the transcript of the evidence. A most careful examination of Mr. Ferguson’s testimony, which in its entirety is but four pages in length, shows that it does not support that statement, nor the statement made by respondent’s counsel in their brief. The following is the only testimony given by Mr. Ferguson which bears on the matter. After describing the course he took and explaining where he let his wife out of the car, Mr. Ferguson testified as follows:

“Q. Just take the pointer, Mr. Ferguson, and show on the map the directions you went there and where you let her off. A. I stayed right on the inside lane on Fourth Avenue South and made a left turn right here and then came back over and let her off right here as soon as I could stop, and then I came back out here and made a left turn and checked with the police later, and it was legal. Mr. Schramm: Just a minute. Q. Just tell what you did. You haven’t any right to say anything else. A. All right. I made a left turn and came back to Second and came into Fourth Avenue there. Q. When you got there did you look any direction? A. Yes. I looked back here at the traffic coming south, heavy traffic at that time. It goes out to Boeings. Q. Did you see Mrs. Ferguson? A. I did. I saw her starting across the intersection. Q. Then what happened? A. Well, I just got a clear spot in the traffic and drove on down Fourth Avenue.” (Italics ours.)

At the En Banc

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Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 445, 27 Wash. 2d 55, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1947.