Mathis v. Ammons

928 P.2d 431
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 21, 1997
Docket19258-6-II
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 928 P.2d 431 (Mathis v. Ammons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathis v. Ammons, 928 P.2d 431 (Wash. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

928 P.2d 431 (1996)
84 Wash.App. 411

Deborah Kay MATHIS, Appellant,
v.
James Walter AMMONS and Eva Ammons, husband and wife; and James Stanley Ammons and Kay Ammons, husband and wife, Respondents.

No. 19258-6-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

December 20, 1996.
As Amended on Denial of Reconsideration January 21, 1997.

*432 R. Daniel Lindahl, Bullivant Houser Bailey, Pendergrass & Hoffman, Portland, OR, for Respondents.

Craig W. Weston, Walstead Mertsching Husemoen Donaldson & Barlow, Longview, for Appellant.

MORGAN, Judge.

In this auto accident case, Deborah Mathis, the plaintiff, seeks to overturn a jury determination that James Ammons, the defendant, was not negligent. We affirm.

At about 8:30 a.m. on August 1, 1990, Ammons was driving a farm tractor west on Growlers Gulch Road, a narrow two lane road in rural Cowlitz County. The road lacked a center line because it had recently been resurfaced.

Ammons was towing a hay rake that extended 18 inches to the left of the tractor's left rear tire. According to his later testimony, he was keeping the tractor and rake entirely within his lane of travel, and cars travelling in the opposite direction had room to pass. He was travelling at the tractor's maximum speed of about 14 miles per hour.

The morning was bright and sunny, and the tractor was passing in and out of shadows cast by roadside foliage. The tractor was not equipped with flashing amber hazard lights, even though it had been manufactured in 1979. The tractor was equipped with headlights, but Ammons did not have them on.

Ammons' failure to display flashing amber hazard lights was a traffic infraction and a violation of statute. RCW 46.37.160(1) provides:

Every farm tractor and every self-propelled unit of farm equipment or implement of husbandry manufactured or assembled after January 1, 1970, shall be equipped with vehicular hazard warning lights of the type described in RCW 46.37.215 visible from a distance of not less than one thousand feet to the front and rear in normal sunlight, which shall be displayed whenever any such vehicle is operated upon a highway.

RCW 46.37.215(3) provides:

Vehicular hazard warning signal lamps used to display such warning to the front *433 shall be mounted at the same level and as widely spaced laterally as practicable, and shall display simultaneously flashing amber light....

RCW 46.37.010 provides that it is a traffic infraction to violate a statute contained in RCW 46.37.

As Ammons came around a curve, according to his later testimony, he saw a car coming toward him, partly on his side of the road. When he first saw it, it was about 200 feet away and travelling at about 20-25 miles per hour. As it approached, he could see the driver looking in her mirror and touching her hair. Attempting to avoid a collision, he veered to his right. The car missed the tractor but hit the hay rake.

Mathis was the driver of the car. According to her later testimony, she was travelling entirely in her own lane at about 20 miles per hour. She was being attentive to the road and was not concerned with her hair. Ammons was "driving right square down the middle of the road," with "at least half" the tractor in her lane.[1] She saw Ammons only an instant before the collision, but she would have seen him sooner if he had been displaying flashing amber hazard lights.

On April 9, 1991, Mathis sued Ammons. She alleged that Ammons had been negligent in operating the tractor and hay rake, and that his negligence had proximately caused damage to her.

On December 19, 1994, a jury trial commenced. Mathis and Ammons testified as described above. Ammons did not offer evidence to excuse or justify the tractor's lack of flashing amber warning lights.

At the end of the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury that a statute required flashing amber hazard lights on a tractor like Ammons', and that a violation of statute was evidence of negligence, as opposed to negligence per se. The court stated in Instruction 11:

A statute provides that:
Every farm tractor shall be equipped with vehicular hazard warning lights of the type described in RCW 46.37.215 visible from a distance of not less than one thousand feet to the front and rear in normal sunlight, which shall be displayed whenever any such vehicle is operated upon a highway.
RCW 46.37.215 provides that:
(3) vehicular hazard warning signal lamps used to display such warning to the front shall be mounted at the same level and as widely spaced as practicable, and shall display simultaneously flashing amber light.

Additionally, the court stated in Instruction 15:

The violation, if any, of a statute is not necessarily negligence, but may be considered by you as evidence in determining negligence.

On December 21, the jury returned a special interrogatory finding that Ammons had not been negligent. In accordance with its instructions, it did not reach the issues of proximate cause, damages, or contributory negligence.

On January 12, 1995, Mathis moved for judgment pursuant to CR 50(b).[2] She argued that Ammons had violated RCW 46.37.160(1) and RCW 46.37.215, and had not produced evidence to excuse or justify the violation; thus, she reasoned, she was entitled to a finding of negligence as a matter of law and to a new trial on the issues of proximate cause and damages. The trial court denied the motion and entered judgment on the verdict.

Mathis argues on appeal, as she did in the trial court, that she is entitled to a finding of negligence as a matter of law. She bases her *434 argument on Ammons' conceded violation of RCW 46.37.160(1) and RCW 46.37.215.

The elements of a negligence action are duty, breach, proximate cause, and damages.[3] Duty is the duty to exercise ordinary care,[4] or, alternatively phrased, the duty to exercise such care as a reasonable person would exercise under the same or similar circumstances.[5] Breach is the failure to exercise ordinary care,[6] or, alternatively phrased, the failure to exercise such care as a reasonable person would exercise under the same or similar circumstances.[7] Breach is also called "negligence."[8]

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Bluebook (online)
928 P.2d 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-ammons-washctapp-1997.