Hadley v. Arms & Scott

241 P. 26, 136 Wash. 632, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1093
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1925
DocketNo. 19376. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 P. 26 (Hadley v. Arms & Scott) 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
Hadley v. Arms & Scott, 241 P. 26, 136 Wash. 632, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1093 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

— The evidence, to sustain respondents’ case, brought for damages to respondent wife.and the automobile of respondents, was challenged, both at the end of respondents’ case and at the conclusion of all the evidence, on the ground that no actionable negligence was shown as against appellant. Respondents allege, and introduced evidence to sustain, substantially the following cause of action:

On February 9,1924, Mrs. Hadley, with three friends in her automobile, was driving in the car of respond *633 ents north, on Sixth avenne, in Seattle, until she reached Stewart street. It was about 2 o’clock p. m., and the day was clear. As she entered the intersection on Stewart street, she heard a fire alarm, and saw an oncoming fire apparatus at a distance, as she thought at the time, of about one block to her right, approaching Sixth avenue on Stewart street from the east. She noticed a vacant space where she could clear the street for the fire apparatus at a point at the northwest comer of Stewart street and Sixth avenue, where there is a comfort station. Sixth avenue, north of Stewart street, was blocked with traffic, and to the south of the intersection, cars were thickly parked along the right hand side of the street; cars were also parked on the south side of Stewart street to her right as she entered the intersection, so that there was apparently no place left where she could obey the ordinance of Seattle and go to the right hand curb and park her car until the fire apparatus had passed.

She gave a left turn signal, passed around the center of the intersection, and stopped as stated. The evidence is contradictory, of course, but there is evidence on behalf of respondents that she parked her car so that it was substantially parallel with the curb at the northwest corner of Sixth and Stewart, the left rear wheel (which was the rear wheel of the car nearest the curb) being about one and one-half feet from the curb, and the front wheel being up. against the curb stone. Another car had parked just in front of her at this intersection, the place where the comfort station was situated being a small triangular space.

Very soon after she had so parked the car, it was struck a glancing blow in the rear by the fire truck, causing injury to herself and damage to the car. The car was thrown up across the curb stone, onto the paving and against the comfort station, and almost demol *634 ished. The place where she parked the car was out of the path of the. approaching fire truck, and the only available parking piace she could see. She knew it .was her duty under the ordinance of Seattle to get out of the way of the fire apparatus, and go to the nearest right hand curb and park. She was followed at some distance, unknown to her, by a heavy coal truck weighing about four tons, and loaded with four tons of coal, belonging to appellant and being then operated in its business. . There is, also, evidence on behalf of respondents. that, after Mrs. Hadley had entered the intersection, gotten clear of the path of the fire truck, and parked her car at the curb near the comfort, station, the coal truck appeared, traveling in the same direction she had come, entered the intersection of Sixth avenue and Stewart street, and proceeded to the center of the intersection where it stopped when the fire truck, traveling, at a rate of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour, was at a distance of twelve to fifteen feet east of the intersection of Stewart street and Sixth avenue.

The fire truck consisted of a combination, hose and pumper truck, and had the driver, the captain, and three firemen on it, the driver riding on the right side of the truck, a fireman riding on the left a little in front of the seat of the driver, and who was sounding a siren, and the captain on the seat to the left of the driver. The siren or bell was being sounded continuously. The combination fire truck weighed nearly eight tons .with the men that were on it.

The fire truck was being driven down the middle of Stewart street to the west, it being customary for fire trucks to be driven in the middle of the street on account of the cars standing near the curb, and generally for the safety of people on the street and on the fire apparatus. There is an ordinance of Seattle that gives .fire apparatus, when responding to emer- *635 geney fire calls, the right of way over all streets. There is, also, an ordinance requiring all vehicles, upon the approach of fire apparatus to gO' to the nearest right hand curb and stop parallel with the curb.

After Mrs. Hadley had cleared the route of the fire truck and when the truck was a distance from Sixth avenue of about thirty-five feet, the driver of the fire truck ■for the first time noticed the coal truck of appellant entering Stewart street from the south on Sixth avenue. On account of cars lined up along the curb to the right of Sixth avenue, the coal truck was being driven about six or seven feet from the curb line. The driver of the fire truck saw that the coal truck was still moving slowly, but as it was moving slowly he thought it would stop before reaching the center of the intersection. It did not stop, however, until it entered the intersection, about twenty-five feet. The intersection was forty-eight feet across in each direction, the middle of it, therefore, would be twenty-four feet from the curb line. When at a distance of twelve to fifteen feet from the intersection, the driver of the fire truck, seeing that a collision with the coal truck was imminent, as it had reached the center of the street, and was directly in the path of the approaching fire truck, attempted to pass to the right and in front of the coal truck by swerving to the right. At this time the coal truck stopped in the center of Stewart street, and probably stopped, as was claimed by appellant, in about four feet; but, if the evidence: and inferences from evidence on the part of respondent are correct, it never attempted to stop until it had gotten too far into the intersection of Stewart street, and was in the path of the oncoming fire truck.

When the driver of the fire truck swerved to the right, he missed the' coal truck, but was unable to swing back to the left in time to avoid the car parked by Mrs. Had-ley. The fire truck struck the Hadley car a glancing *636 blow as he swerved to the left after passing the coal truck, striking the automobile about the center of its rear. The driver of the fire truck said he cleared the front of the coal truck by two feet. The place where Mrs. Hadley parked her car was, therefore, a safe place, if the coal truck had not continued, after entering the intersection, to the place where it stopped and the fire apparatus had been permitted to continue on the line it was traveling. In that case, it would have missed the car of respondents a distance of from seven to eight feet. If it had continued in its course down the middle of the street, it would have struck the coal truck about in line with the driver’s seat, and would probably not only have injured or killed the driver of the coal truck and his assistant, but also the driver and firemen riding on the fire truck. The driver of the fire truck, seeing the position of the coal truck, had only about one second in which to act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 P. 26, 136 Wash. 632, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-arms-scott-wash-1925.