Kerr v. Cochran

396 P.2d 642, 65 Wash. 2d 211, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 467
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
Docket37126
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 396 P.2d 642 (Kerr v. Cochran) 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
Kerr v. Cochran, 396 P.2d 642, 65 Wash. 2d 211, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 467 (Wash. 1964).

Opinion

Donworth,

J.—This case arose out of an automobile accident involving four cars. The evidence presented to the jury was in direct conflict on some critical factual issues, but the following will serve as a general description of the several alleged collisions.

Car number one was owned by plaintiffs Kerr and was driven by Mr. Kerr, with Mrs. Kerr as a passenger. It was proceeding south on Highway 99 between Seattle and Tacoma, in the inside lane, about 6 p.m. on April 21, 1961. At that time the three cars of the various defendants (both other respondents and appellants) were headed north on *213 the highway, approaching its intersection with South 222nd Street in King County.

Car number two, the first car headed north, was driven by Mr. Cochran, and was owned by Mrs. Turner, a passenger in the car. It was traveling in the inside lane.

Car number three, the second car headed north, was driven by Mrs. Cofer. As stated later in this opinion, there was a minimum of evidence as to the ownership of this car and whether it belonged to Mrs. Cofer or to the community. There was testimony that this car was traveling in the inside lane at the time of impact, although Mrs. Cofer testified that she was in the outside lane until her car was hit from behind.

Car number four, the third car headed north, was driven by Mr. Osborne, who had his family with him. This car was owned by Mr. and Mrs. Fabijan. It was traveling in the inside lane, and Mr. Osborne claims to have been following the Cofer car in this lane for some distance.

The accident occurred about 40 feet south of the intersection. The pavement was wet from a recent rain. There were steady streams of heavy traffic in all four lanes, two headed north and two headed south. The northbound inside lane, in which the three cars of the defendants were apparently traveling just prior to the chain of collisions, was blocked by two other cars also traveling north, the first one of which was awaiting an opportunity to turn left at the intersection. Cars number two, three, and four were each presented with the problem of stopping as they approached the car in front. The sequence and effects of each impact are disputed facts. However, the accident may be basically described as follows:

Car number one (Kerr car) was struck approximately head on by car number two (Cochran car) after car number two had crossed the double center line into the oncoming traffic lane. Car number two struck car number one either by its own motion or by being pushed into car number one after it was struck by car number three (Cofer car).

Whether car number one and car number two had already collided prior to the time that the impact occurred between *214 car number two and car number three is in dispute. Car number three struck car number two either by its own motion or by being pushed into car number two after having been struck in the rear by car number four (Osborne car).

Whether car number two and car number three had already collided when this impact occurred between car number three and car number four is also in dispute.

These disputed facts were the subject of conflicting testimony by the various drivers and witnesses.

In addition to respondents Kerrs’ complaint against several owners and operators of the respective cars above mentioned, respondents Cochran and Turner cross-complained against appellants Cofer for personal injuries and car damage allegedly sustained in the collision between their cars.

The jury returned verdicts against appellants, allowing damages as follows:

“1. for personal injuries to plaintiff Herbert S. Kerr, $15,000.00;
“2. for personal injuries to plaintiff Eileen M. Kerr, $10,000.00;
“3. for the plaintiffs’ auto damage, $1,250.00;
“4. for personal injuries to cross-complainant Norvall H. Cochran, $8,000.00;
“5. for personal injuries to cross-complainant Fay Turner, $10,000.00;
“6. for cross-complainants’ auto damage, $805.46.”

Appellants’ motion for a new trial was heard and denied and judgment was entered on the verdicts. They then appealed to this court. 1

The assignments of error raised by appellants will each be discussed in the order in which they are raised in their brief.

The first assignment of error is that the trial court commented on the evidence by giving instruction No. 12, *215 over the objection of appellants. A comment on the evidence by a trial court is forbidden by Const. Art. 4, § 16.

The instruction complained of reads:

“In this connection, I instruct you that an operator of a vehicle that is struck in the rear and thereby pushed across the barrier stripes and into the oncoming traffic lane through-no negligence on his part is not guilty of negligence proximately causing a subsequent collision merely because his vehicle has been pushed across said barrier stripes and into the oncoming traffic. The burden of proof rests upon such operator to explain how he arrived on the wrong side of the highway without negligence on his part.” (Italics ours.)

We conclude that the giving of this instruction was not reversible error. Our conclusion is based on two reasons. First, this specific instruction is not a direct comment on the evidence, within the meaning of the constitution, as interpreted by us in prior cases.

In French v. Seattle Traction Co., 26 Wash. 264, 66 Pac. 404 (1901), at pages 269-270, this court stated:

“. . . What statements of the judge, in his charge to the jury, with reference to the evidence, will, and what will not, amount to a comment upon the facts within the meaning of the constitutional inhibition, are questions not always easy of solution; but it cannot be meant by this clause of the constitution that the court shall not refer to the evidence at all. Necessarily, his charge must be based upon the evidence, and he must ‘declare the law’ applicable to that state of facts which the evidence of either party tends to establish. In order to do this, the judge must refer to the evidence in some manner. We have said he may make such references hypothetically; that is, he may state to the jury, ‘If you find from the evidence that such a state of facts exist, the law is as follows,’ etc., although he may not state or assume in his charge that any particular fact is conclusively proven. Bardwell v. Ziegler, 3 Wash. 34 (28 Pac. 360); State v. Walters, 7 Wash. 246 (34 Pac. 938.) If the judge may, in his charge to the jury, refer to the evidence thus indirectly, there would seem to be no very good reason why he may not do so directly; and we think, so long as the reference made does not amount to an explanation or criticism of the evidence, or assert or assume that a particular fact is proven thereby, it matters little what form the reference takes. . . . ”

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Bluebook (online)
396 P.2d 642, 65 Wash. 2d 211, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-cochran-wash-1964.