Lund v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

74 P.2d 220, 192 Wash. 579, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 352
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 26761. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 220 (Lund v. Western Union Telegraph 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
Lund v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 74 P.2d 220, 192 Wash. 579, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 352 (Wash. 1937).

Opinion

Millard, J.

While traversing Hamilton street at its intersection with Montgomery street, in the city of Spokane, a pedestrian was struck by an automobile operated by Alfred E. Beitlich in the service of the Western Union Telegraph Company. The pedestrian instituted this action to recover from the employee *580 and the employer for personal injuries sustained as a result of that accident. Defendants denied negligence on their part and pleaded in bar of the action contributory negligence of the plaintiff- as the proximate cause of the accident. Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of dismissal entered on the verdict in favor of the defendants.

Error is first assigned on the denial of appellant’s motion for a new trial on the ground of the insufficiency of evidence to support the verdict. It is argued that respondents’ negligence amounts to negligence as a matter of law, and that any negligence of appellant by reason of jay-walking (walking outside the boundaries of the crosswalk) was not the proximate cause of the accident.

Any question whether the negligence of the respondents or the contributory negligence of the appellant was the proximate cause of the accident is foreclosed by the verdict of the jury. That verdict is based on conflicting evidence, therefore the evidence of the respondents must be taken as true, as well as all reasonable inferences deducible from such evidence.

“Since the verdict of the jury, we must consider the facts resolved as presented by the respondents. Where there is conflict in the evidence, the facts are for the jury and, unless physically impossible or naturally improbable so that reasonable minds could not differ thereon, we are compelled to accept as conclusive all those facts which must necessarily have .been resolved by the jury in respondents’ favor.” Tooker v. Perkins, 86 Wash. 567, 574, 150 Pac. 1138.

The weather was clear and dry when the accident occurred after dark about 7:30 p. m., September 12, 1936, at the intersection of Hamilton and Montgomery streets in the city of Spokane. No traffic lights or other' signals were at that intersection. Hamilton *581 street runs north and south. It is seventy-seven feet wide at the intersection due to the straightening of a slight jog in the street at that point by cutting off the northeast and southwest corners of the intersection. Montgomery street is forty feet wide and runs east and west.

Respondents’ witnesses testified that appellant was walking east across Hamilton street five or six feet north of the north line of the north crosswalk of the intersection. The width of the crosswalk is fixed at ten feet by the lines marking the northern and southern boundaries of the crosswalk. Section 127, ordinance No. C5505, of the city of Spokane provides that a pedestrian, when crossing a street outside the lines of ■the sidewalk projected, shall yield the right of way to vehicles traveling upon the street. Appellant, who was sixty-five years old at the time of the accident, was familiar with conditions at the intersection as he had lived in that vicinity seventeen years. Beitlich’s automobile, with headlights burning, was proceeding at a lawful rate of speed north on Hamilton street. No other traffic was near the intersection at that time.

On the east side of Hamilton street south of Montgomery street is a solid row of store buildings, the windows of which were illuminated at the timé of the accident. Those lights, together with the illumination from an arc light in the center of the intersection, made a glare. Against that glare, to the north, was a black background, as there were no other lights for a distance of several blocks north of the arc light in the center of the intersection of Hamilton and Montgomery streets.

Appellant testified that, when he arrived at the center of Hamilton street, he looked to the south for approaching traffic. He observed Beitlich’s automobile more than a block south of the intersection. *582 There was nothing unusual about the operation of the automobile to excite the attention of appellant, who continued his journey — thirty-eight or thirty-nine feet remained for appellant to traverse before arrival at the east curb — across Hamilton street. When he was at a point ten to twenty or twenty-five feet from the east curb of Hamilton street, the appellant again glanced to the south and saw Beitlich’s automobile, which was then one-half block distant from the intersection. Appellant did. not again see — he testified he never heard the noise of the automobile’s approach— the automobile until subsequent to the collision, which, according to his testimony; occurred at a point seven or eight feet west of the east curb of Hamilton street within the boundary lines of the north crosswalk, outside of which he never stepped. The automobile, after it struck appellant, was stopped within a distance of not to exceed one and one-half times its length.

Beitlich testified that the first time he saw appellant was after the automobile passed the arc light in the center of the intersection (this arc light, according to the map, is twenty feet from the south boundary of the north crosswalk), at which time appellant was approximately ten feet north of and facing the automobile, a little “to my left, that would be to the west.” Appellant stepped to the left (to the west) and then to the right (to the east).

“. . . Well, it wasn’t what you would exactly call a step. It was sort of a waver, first to my left and then back again ... To the right, yes sir; my right.”

When appellant wavered or stepped to the right, Beitlich steered the automobile to the left and applied the brakes, but his efforts to avoid striking the appellant were unavailing. Beitlich could not see all of *583 the north crosswalk because of the glare made by the arc light in the center of the intersection and the lights in the store windows on the east side of Hamilton street and the unlighted background to the north, until his automobile passed under thé arc light in the center of the intersection.

We elicit from our examination of the statement of facts that appellant was in doubt as to the point in the intersection from which he first and last viewed the automobile. Whether he first looked at the automobile when he was in the middle of the intersection or when he was twenty-five feet from the east curb of Hamilton street, and whether he was in the middle of the intersection or from ten to twenty-five feet west of the east curb of Hamilton street when he last looked to the south for approaching traffic, are, of course, questions of fact for the jury. That is, at what point he first saw the automobile and at what point he -made the second and last observation before he was struck, constituted questions of fact for the jury.

If he were, as the verdict reflects the jury believed, jay-walking (crossing the street outside the boundaries of the crosswalk), the automobile had the right of way. Whether such negligence was the proximate cause of the accident, was a question for the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 220, 192 Wash. 579, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lund-v-western-union-telegraph-co-wash-1937.