Leopold v. Livermore

197 P. 778, 115 Wash. 481, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 770
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1921
DocketNo. 16155
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 197 P. 778 (Leopold v. Livermore) 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
Leopold v. Livermore, 197 P. 778, 115 Wash. 481, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 770 (Wash. 1921).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

The appellant, Leopold, instituted this action against the respondents, Livermore, in the superior court of Spokane county, to recover in damages for injuries received in an automobile accident occurring in that county. The respondents are, and were at the time of the commencement of the action, residents of Skagit county and were served with summons while in the county of their residence. At the time they appeared in the action, the respondents filed an affidavit of merits and moved the court to transfer the cause to Skagit county, the place of their residence. This motion the trial court granted. After the cause had been docketed in Skagit county, the appellant moved, under § 209 of the code (Rem.) to change the place of trial to Spokane county, basing the. motion on the third subdivision of that section, which authorizes a court to change the place of trial when “the conven[483]*483ience of witnesses or the ends of justice would be forwarded by the change.” This motion the trial court denied. The cause was then tried on its merits to a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the respondents.

In this court the appellant, as grounds for reversing the judgment, contends that the court erred; first, in refusing to change the place of trial to Spokane county; second, in permitting counsel for the respondents at the trial of the cause to refer to the verdict of the coroner’s jury, returned at an inquest held in Spokane county over the body of Dr. Schlosberg, who was killed in the accident; and third, in refusing to grant a new trial because of improper conduct on the part of the respondent L. H. Livermore at the time of the trial.

It is to the first of these assignments that the argument of counsel in this court is mainly directed. Preliminarily, it may be noted that when the respondents applied to the court of Spokane county for a change of venue to the county of their residence, the appellant resisted the motion on the ground that the convenience of witnesses and the ends of justice required that the cause be tried in Spokane county. The court ruled, however, that the respondents could, under the statutes, insist as a matter of right that the venue of the action be changed to the county of their residence, and that it was a primary question for the court of that county to determine where the trial should be had, and declined to consider the question, entering an order changing the venue to Skagit county. In so ruling, the court followed a practice subsequently held by this court in State ex rel. Owen v. Superior Court, 110 Wash. 49, 187 Pac. 708, to be the correct practice. The question, therefore, whether the convenience of wit[484]*484nesses or the ends of justice required the cause to be tried in Spokane county was a primary question for the court of Skagit county, in determining which it was privileged to apply to its consideration the rules and principles of law applicable to actions originally instituted before it.

The statute relating to the venue of civil actions is found at §§ 204 to 219 of the code (Rem.). These need not be set forth at length. After providing for the place of commencement and the place of trial of certain local actions, it is provided (§ 207): •

“In all other cases the action must be tried in the county in which the defendants, or some of them, reside at the time of the commencement of the action, or may be served with process, subject, however, to the power of the court to change the place of trial, as provided in the.nest two succeeding sections.”

The first of the sections referred to provides that, if the county in which the action is commenced is not the proper county for the trial thereof, the action may, notwithstanding, be tried therein, unless the defendant at the time he appears demands that the trial be had in the proper county. The second (§209), provides:

“The court may, on motion, in the following cases, change the place of trial, when it appears by affidavit or other satisfactory proof, . . .
“3. That the convenience of witnesses or the ends of justice would be forwarded by the change; . . .”

Construing these sections of the statute, we have heretofore uniformly held that an application based on the ground of convenience of witnesses appealed to the discretion of the court, and would be reviewed by us only for manifest abuse. State ex rel. Port Blakely Mill Co. v. Superior Court, 9 Wash. 673, 38 Pac. 155; Culbertson v. Gilbert Hunt Co., 79 Wash. 446, 140 Pac. [485]*485548; State ex rel. Conley v. Superior Court, 106 Wash. 569, 181 Pac. 50.

So we have held with reference to the somewhat similar statutes relating to a change of venue in criminal causes. McAllister v. Washington Territory, 1 Wash. Terr. 360; Edwards v. State, 2 Wash. 291, 26 Pac. 258; State v. Straub, 16 Wash. 111, 47 Pac. 227; State v. Champoux, 33 Wash. 339, 74 Pac. 557; State v. Welty, 65 Wash. 244, 118 Pac. 9; State v. Smith, ante p. 405,197 Pac. 770.

In State v. Welty, supra, this language was used:

“It is apparent, from a reading of these sections, that a granting or denying of the change of venue is a matter resting entirely in the sound judicial discretion of the trial judge. Such being the statute, the ruling of the trial court cannot be reversed upon appeal, unless the record contains some evidence of its gross abuse, or it is shown that the court’s ruling was arbitrary. . . . Such also is the general rule in construing statutes of like import. 12 Cyc. 243.”

Turning to the showing made, it is not to be doubted that the moving party showed with sufficient definiteness that the convenience of his own witnesses would be forwarded by a change of the place of trial to Spokane county. It not only appears that the accident giving rise to the action occurred in that county, but that all of the witnesses he desired to call, with possibly two exceptions, resided therein. But this is not alone a controlling consideration. The convenience of the defendant and his witnesses must also be given consideration. Subject only to the power of the court to change the place of trial, he has the absolute right to have the cause tried in the county of his residence; the language of the statute being that it “must be tried” therein, subject only to this power to change. It thus appears that the plaintiff may not himself [486]*486select the forum of trial. He is the aggressor in the action. It is he who seeks affirmative relief, and it is no injustice to him to say, as the statute does say, that he must wage his action in the place of the defendant’s residence, however more convenient some other place might he to him. The court therefore, when the application was made to it for the change, had the right to take into view the entire situation, rather than alone the convenience of the appellant.

Of the actual eyewitnesses to the transaction, the greater number testified on behalf of the respondents, and of these, three, aside from the respondents themselves, were actual residents of Skagit county. In addition to these three, others were called who were residents of Skagit county. Clearly, we think, the court could justly hold that it would have been as great an inconvenience to the respondents to hold the trial in Spokane county as it was to the appellant to hold it in Skagit county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P. 778, 115 Wash. 481, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leopold-v-livermore-wash-1921.