Nabours v. City of Seattle

194 P. 800, 113 Wash. 557, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 570
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1921
DocketNo. 15998
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 194 P. 800 (Nabours v. City of Seattle) 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
Nabours v. City of Seattle, 194 P. 800, 113 Wash. 557, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 570 (Wash. 1921).

Opinion

Mackintosh, J.

At the conclusion of respondent’s case, which was one for the recovery of damages for personal injuries, the court granted the appellant’s motion for a nonsuit on the ground that the respondent had been guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law. Thereafter the respondent’s motion for a new trial was granted, and from that disposition of the matter, the ease is here on appeal.

The sole question for consideration is whether the court originally erred in determining, as a matter of law, that the respondent was not entitled to succeed by reason of his contributory negligence. The facts are [558]*558these: On September 2,1919, the respondent was driving in Seattle a small truck, loaded with lumber, weighing about one ton. He was proceeding easterly on Oregon street, which is an unpaved, sandy street, and which approaches California avenue at an up grade of two and 2/10 per cent. California avenue is a paved street, running north and south, intersecting Oregon street at right angles, and approaching Oregon street from the north at a down grade of four and 3/10 per cent.

The respondent was thoroughly familiar with the locality, and as he approached California Avenue, he was driving about four miles an hour. "When about fifty feet from the car tracks on California Avenue, he looked to the north and saw a street car approaching. The car was then between five hundred and six hundred feet north of the intersection of Oregon street and California Avenue. Respondent knew that cars ran quite rapidly on this portion of California Avenue, although the limit of speed fixed by the city ordinance was twenty miles per hour. One witness testified that, when the street car was six hundred feet north of the intersection, it was traveling at a rate of thirty miles per hour. After having looked to the north, respondent looked to the south to see if there were any vehicles approaching from that direction. Without again looking to the north, whence the street car was approaching, he proceeded to cross California Avenue. At the time, there was a lady standing on the southeast corner of California Avenue and Oregon street, intending- to cross to the west side of the avenue. She looked to the north, as did the respondent, and thinking that the street car was so far up the hill that she had ample time to cross, proceeded to cross the street, starting at the same time as the respondent. When [559]*559she got to the middle of the street, she testified: “I was over next to the track and I heard the gong ringing very rapidly, and I looked up and it was so near that I stepped back.” She further testified that, at this time, the street car was about one hundred feet away. The respondent testified that, at the rate of speed at which he was proceeding, he could have stopped his car in the distance of eighteen inches.

The track which the street car was using was not in the center of California Avenue, but somewhat nearer the west side, the side nearest the respondent. When the respondent first heard the gong of the street car, •the ear was then about one hundred feet from him. He then attempted to turn his machine to the right to get off the track, but the street car overtook him and carried the truck a distance of some sixty feet before it was stopped.

It appears from the testimony of these two witnesses that both had conducted themselves in exactly the same manner. They had each looked before attempting to cross the street to the north, and each had seen the car at a distance of about six hundred feet from the intersection; they both had estimated- that they could cross the street in safety before the car would reach the intersection. The lady, walking at a slightly less rate of speed than the truck was going, and having a little farther, to go, concluded that she was perfectly safe in proceeding. They each had gone approximately the' same distance when they were attracted by the ringing of the gong on the street car, and each, looking up, saw the car at the same instant and at the distance of about one hundred feet from them. The lady was able to step back from the street car track and avoid injury; the motor truck had at the time arrived upon the street car tracks, and it was impossible to [560]*560stop and avoid collision. The only possible escape from accident was to speed up the truck and attempt to get it out of the way of the oncoming street car, and this respondent was unable to do.

Under these facts, it does not seem possible to say, as a matter of law, the respondent was guilty of such contributory negligence that his case should not be passed on by the jury. The reports are filled with personal injury cases which, on their faces, are more or less similar to the facts in this case, and to review those cases, one by oue, pointing out the slight differences of fact, would be merely to catalogue the cases without establishing any new legal principle. The rule is stated in Golay v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 105 Wash. 132, 177 Pac. 804, 181 Pac. 700, in reference to the crossing of steam railway tracks, where the person crossing is generally held to a more rigid standard of precaution than is one crossing a street railway, that:

“A pedestrian or driver of any vehicle cannot recover for injuries occasioned by a car or train when the evidence discloses that he approached the track where he could have, had he looked in that direction, observed an approaching car or train, but did not look and proceeded into the zone of . danger without taking any reasonable precaution to avoid the collision J >

but that,

“Where the pedestrian or driver of a vehicle has approached the railroad track and has exercised some degree of care and caution in attempting to apprise himself of the approach of a car or train . . .”

then,

“When he has looked or listened and has not seen nor heard the car or train approaching, or when he has looked and has'seen the car or train approaching and has not been able, by reasonable care, to determine the speed of its approach, he has the right then to as-[561]*561sum ft that the railroad company will not place a car or train within striking distance of him by operating such car or train at an unlawful rate of speed. There is then presented a question of fact for the jury to determine whether he has exercised a reasonable degree of care and caution for the purpose of his self-protection. ”

See, also, on this point Johnson v. Seattle, ante p. 487, 194 Pac. 417.

The court cannot say, as a matter of law, that respondent had not taken reasonable steps to insure his safety, and that reasonable minds could not differ on the question, when the evidence discloses that another person, at the same time and under the same circumstances, had acted in an exactly similar manner.

The evidence, as presented by the respondent, shows that the street car must have been exceeding a lawful rate of speed, and it was for the jury to say whether, under all the circumstances, the respondent’s conduct amounted to contributory negligence.

Among the great number of cases which this court has passed on involving the determination of the question of whether a plaintiff’s conduct has, as a matter of law, precluded him from recovery, the one of Denny v. Seattle, Renton etc. R. Co., 60 Wash. 426, 111 Pac. 450, seems to most nearly approximate the case at bar.

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Bluebook (online)
194 P. 800, 113 Wash. 557, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nabours-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1921.