Haaga v. Saginaw Logging Co.

5 P.2d 505, 165 Wash. 367, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 877
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1931
DocketNo. 23222. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 505 (Haaga v. Saginaw Logging 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
Haaga v. Saginaw Logging Co., 5 P.2d 505, 165 Wash. 367, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 877 (Wash. 1931).

Opinions

Parker, J.

— The plaintiff, Haaga, commenced this action in the superior court for Grays Harbor county seeking recovery of damages for personal injuries which he claims he suffered as the result of the negligence of the defendants, logging company and Aubert, its motorman, in the operation of its gasoline railway motor upon its railway over a county road grade crossing.

*369 Haaga was riding in a Chevrolet sedan automobile owned and being driven by M. S. Hubbard northerly along the county road over the railway crossing when it was struck by the motor, which was proceeding easterly on the railway, resulting in his very serious injuries for which he claims recovery. The cause proceeded to trial in the superior court, sitting with a jury, and resulted in verdict and judgment awarding to Haaga recovery against both defendants in the sum of forty thousand dollars, from which they have appealed to this court.

The logging company has been, for a period of several years past, engaged in extensive logging operations in Grays Harbor and Pacific counties. While its principal office has been maintained at Aberdeen, in Grays Harbor county, its principal headquarters for its logging operations were, at the time in question, at the village of Brooklyn, in Pacific county, a short distance south of the common boundary of those counties. The village is composed largely of the logging company’s plant, which consists of its roundhouse, its machine shop, its office, its store, a considerable number of its cottages occupied by its employees, and its railway yards for the accommodation of its large number of railway cars, its several steam locomotives and its several gasoline railway motors. There are also some residences in private ownership. There is a postoffice near the northeasterly edge of the village.

The crossing where the accident occurred is a short distance easterly from the village. It is plainly a country crossing, not a town crossing. The nearest houses are some three hundred feet distant from the crossing. The postoffice and a store are about one-quarter of a mile north of the crossing on the same county road. The roundhouse, shops and office of the company are about one-quarter of a mile westerly from *370 the crossing. Haaga occupied as his living quarters a cottage about one-quarter of a mile westerly from the crossing, a short distance from the office. Hubbard lived in his own house situated a little more than one-quarter of a mile southwesterly from the crossing near the same county road.

The railway track crossing the road is the company’s main line track leading from the roundhouse, office and yards easterly out into the woods, where the logging’ operations are carried on at different localities. Close to the county road on its westerly side and some 130 feet southerly from the crossing, there rises a steep bluff obstructing the view westerly along the main line track and a spur ending near the west side of the road some thirty-eight feet south of the crossing. The road runs slightly west of south from the crossing to the bluff. It there turns more to the west around the bluff, continuing beyond Hubbard’s house. The road is improved by a well gravelled surface eighteen feet wide. The railway is of the usual construction of standard railways.

The motor in question, called by some of the witnesses a speeder, consists of a short railway flat car some twenty-five feet long, mounted on four ordinary railway car wheels, propelled by a ninety horse-power gasoline engine mounted on one end of the platform, with a small cab immediately back of the engine. It has an automatic coupler on each end. It has a whistle capable of being heard a long distance; witnesses testifying that, under favorable conditions, the whistle could be heard a distance of several miles. It has two headlights, each of the usual automobile headlight type, one on the front of the top of the cab casting its rays forward, and the other on the rear of the top of the cab casting its rays to the rear. It weighs nine tons without any load. It is used to haul men and supplies *371 between the company’s headquarters and the logging operations out along its main and branch line tracks, and in switching cars in the yards. It is capable of moving efficiently six ordinary railway cars at one time.

At the time Haaga was injured, he had been employed by the logging company for a period of a year or more as head chainman of its surveying crew. Hubbard, a surveyor, was then working for the logging company as a member of the same crew.

During the morning of the day in question, Hubbard walked from his home along the county road to the crossing and along the track to meet Haaga at headquarters, arriving there at about seven o’clock. They then, with another member of the surveying crew, went in Haaga’s automobile a distance of some two or three miles out into the woods, where Haaga parked his car near a road. They then commenced surveying near there, working towards headquarters. When they had completed their day’s work at between four and five o’clock, they were but a short distance from headquarters.

They then walked to headquarters, leaving Haaga’s car where it had been parked. Haaga then went to his living quarters and changed his clothes. He then went with Hubbard to his home as a guest of Hubbard; this, in any event, wholly outside the course of the employment of either of them. They walked easterly along the railway track to the crossing, and thence along the county road to Hubbard’s home. As they passed the crossing, each of them remembered, though not very certainly, seeing cars standing on the spur west of the road and south of the main track. Cars so standing there would somewhat obstruct the view to the west, along the main track, of one approaching the crossing along the road from the south. They visited *372 together at Hubbard’s home, having dinner in the meantime, until about half past six o’clock, or possibly a little later. Mrs. Hubbard then asked Hubbard to go to the store and postoffice on a family errand. Hubbard, intending to go in his Chevrolet sedan, offered to take Haaga along, so he could at least ride a part of his way back to his living quarters.

Twilight had then been passed, almost into the full darkness of the night. Hubbard turned on the lights of his automobile, and, with Haaga sitting to his right in the front seat, drove along the road around the bluff to the crossing at a speed at no time of over fifteen to twenty miles per hour and, as he says, slowing up at the crossing. He says upon approaching the crossing he looked in both directions along the track and did not see anything approaching thereon. He says he did not hear any whistle or bell, and did not see any light indicating the presence of any moving object along the track.

Haaga, sitting on the right, said he looked to the right, that is, to the east, along the track, his view being in that direction unobstructed for a distance of several hundred feet. While he says he glanced to the left, evidently he did so only casually, depending upon Hubbard to look out for possible danger from that direction. He says he did not hear any whistle or see any light or reflection thereof upon the track, indicating the presence of any moving object along the track.

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 505, 165 Wash. 367, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haaga-v-saginaw-logging-co-wash-1931.