Hart v. King County

177 P. 344, 104 Wash. 485
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1918
DocketNo. 14884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 177 P. 344 (Hart v. King 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
Hart v. King County, 177 P. 344, 104 Wash. 485 (Wash. 1918).

Opinion

Chadwick, J.

Appellants brought this action to recover for an injury suffered by the plaintiff wife while traveling from the downtown district in Seattle to Kirkland, on the east shore of Lake Washington. The route of travel was over the Madison street car line of the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Company, and the ferry maintained by respondent King county between the western shore of Lake Washington at the end of Madison street and the [487]*487eastern shore of the lake. The plaintiff husband being joined to satisfy the statute, we shall refer to the plaintiff wife as the plaintiff.

The appeal is from a judgment of dismissal as to King county, after the court had sustained a general demurrer to the second amended complaint. The traction company is not a party to this appeal. The demurrer admits that the county of King is maintaining, under the authority of existing statutes, a ferry for hire, with approaches for the use of intending passengers; that the traction company’s street car line ends at about the east side of Laurelshade avenue, a street or boulevard skirting the western shores of Lake Washington; that the traction company and the respondent maintain a plank roadway or approach from the terminus of the 'street railway to the landing slip of the ferry.

It is fairly stated in the complaint that the approach or roadway was a link in the method provided by the two defendants for the continuous movement of passengers from the city to the ferry. It is also alleged that, although the approach was built upon property owned by the traction company, the respondent and the traction company had entered into a contract whereby King county had assumed the duty of keeping the plank road or approach in repair.

We take it from the briefs that the court was of the opinion that the county would not be liable because the title to the property over which the roadway had been laid was in the traction company; and, furthermore, that the complaint did not sufficiently charge that the injury complained of occurred at a time when any duty, under any theory of the law, would attach to respondent.

[488]*488The allegations of the complaint going to the injury are as follows:

“. . . and [the approach] was then and had long been used in common by the said two defendants aforesaid for the travel of the invited and intending passengers of each of said defendants going and coming and returning to and from the said street cars and the wharf and ferry boats of said two defendants respectively; and the plaintiff Hazel Hart, while such passenger of said defendant Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Company, and while alighting from said street car, and- while in the attempting to walk upon the said regularly used plankway or approach to said ferry, and while in the direct pathway thereof, leading straight to said ticket office of said ferry from said street car terminus, in walking towards said wharf with the intent and for the purpose of taking passage on the ferry boat of King county, which was scheduled to leave at ten o’clock p.m. for Kirkland, stepped into a hole in said plankway, which hole was about thirteen inches long and four and one-half inches wide and was about thirteen inches southward from the easterly end of the southerly rail of the said street car track, and about six or seven feet easterly from the east side of Laurelshade avenue produced across the eastern end of Madison street, and instantly fell upon said plankway while her foot was thus in said hole to the extent of thirteen inches in depth, which said stepping and falling caused said plaintiff the severe and serious injuries hereinafter detailed. That said fall occurred at about nine fifty-five o’clock on the night of said 30th day of November, 1916, and while there was not sufficient light of any kind whereby said plaintiff might or could see said hole in said plankway, and said plaintiff had never seen said hole nor had she been told of it nor warned about it by any one, and never knew or heard of its existence before said fall.”

Counsel for respondent rests his main argument upon that part of the complaint which says ‘ ‘ and while [489]*489alighting from said street car.” The law requires us to construe complaints liberally as against a general demurrer, and when so considered we think, in the absence of a motion to make the complaint more definite and certain, there is a fair charge of liability. The words “and while in the attempting to walk upon the said regularly used plankway or approach to said ferry, and while in the direct pathway thereof, leading straight to said ticket office of said ferry and from said street car terminus, in walking towards said wharf with the intent and for the purpose of taking passage on the ferry boat of King county . . . stepped into a hole in said plankway, which hole was . . . about six or seven feet easterly from the east side of Laurelshade avenue produced across the eastern end of Madison street,” and that part of paragraph 6 of the complaint wherein it is alleged that the plank approaches to the ferry extend from Laurel-shade avenue east to the King county wharf and ferry, must be given their legal weight and inferences. When the whole complaint is construed together, it would seem that the words “alighting from said street car” were used in a general sense and, as qualified by other references, are sufficient to charge that it was while going from the street car to the ferry that plaintiff fell and injured herself.

But if this construction be not sound — if, as it is alleged, the roadway or approach between the terminus of the one common carrier and the other was maintained jointly and as an aid to traffic and intending passengers, the county’s liability would begin when the plaintiff stepped onto the plank roadway, although she may have been in the act of alighting from the street car; for it will be borne in mind that there is no charge that she was injured by any move[490]*490ment of the street car. The thing relied upon is the defect in the approach, and that alone.

By availing itself of the privileges offered under Rem. Code, § 5013, the county made of itself a common carrier for hire. It is operating in its proprietary capacity (Anderson Steamboat Co. v. King County, 84 Wash. 375, 146 Pac. 855), and as such proprietor is liable to answer in damages for its acts or omissions, as would an individual or a quasi public corporation engaged in a like enterprise for hire. Bergen v. Lewis County, 95 Wash. 499, 164 Pac. 73.

Many cases are cited by counsel on either side going to the law of “intending passengers.” None of them covers a case like this where two common carriers, each acting independently in the collection of fares, maintain an approach, or connecting way, in common for mutual benefit and for the convenience of passengers who are compelled to transfer from one carrier to the other. The duty of maintenance, by whatever method that duty is divided between themselves, being upon both carriers, it would seem that an injury sustained while transferring would make both carriers answerable - for neglect of the mutual duty. For in such cases the duty of protection to passengers is, as between the carriers, neither individual nor delegable, nor can it be evaded by contract inter sese, or by a denial of an ownership of the fee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 344, 104 Wash. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-king-county-wash-1918.