Peterson v. King County

90 P.2d 729, 199 Wash. 106
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1939
DocketNo. 27166. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 729 (Peterson v. King County) 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
Peterson v. King County, 90 P.2d 729, 199 Wash. 106 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

On the morning of December 15, 1936, the plaintiffs, employed on a WPA project in King county, some twenty miles east of Kirkland, were on their way to work, riding in a Ford car owned and driven by the plaintiff Williams. Williams lived at Kirkland, and left there about 7:15. At Redmond, he was joined by Peterson and Austin. From Redmond, their course to the place where they were employed was over the Sunset highway.

The morning was cold and foggy. The fog varied in density; in places it would be light, and then heavy banks would be encountered. At about 7:45, while driving in one of these fog banks, so dense that the headlights of the car and a fog light, which it also carried, would not disclose an unlighted object for a greater distance than twenty feet ahead, the car collided with the rear of a motor-driven road grader owned by the defendant, King county, and operated by its employee, Sidney Stevens. The plaintiffs sustained personal injuries and damage to the Williams' car, for all of which they brought this action.

At the time of the collision, the Williams’ car was moving at the rate of about twenty miles an hour. The grader weighed about five and a half tons, was seven feet wide, and was moving at the rate of seven miles an hour on its own side of the road. It was equipped with dual pneumatic tires on the rear wheels and single tires on the front wheels. It had no electric head or tail lights. The only provision for lighting was an ordinary kerosene lantern with a red globe, which Stevens testified he had lighted before leaving *108 Redmond and fastened with wire to a bracket on top of the left fender. After the accident, the lantern was found extinguished on the pavement. Stevens testified that he looked back and saw the lantern was burning about a minute and a half before the accident.

The county housed two graders at Redmond; the second was driven by Ralph Ingle. Both drivers left Redmond about 7:30, their destination being a dirt road where the graders were to be employed. To reach this road, they were required to drive easterly on the Sunset highway. The grader driven by Ingle was moving ahead of the one driven by Stevens. The plaintiffs testified that there was no light on the grader nearest them, but they could see a red light or flare some three to five hundred feet ahead. It is admitted that the lantern carried by the forward grader was burning at all times.

The cause was tried to a jury. After the return of its verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, the defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and, in the alternative, for new trial. The court denied the motion for judgment notwithstanding, but granted the motion for a new trial for the assigned reason

“. . . that the court committed error of law in giving Court’s instruction number (8) eight by which the jury was instructed that a road grader was a vehicle under the laws of the state of Washington, in force at the time of the accident out of which the above action arose, and that said instruction was wrong for said reason and no other and should not have been given.”

The plaintiffs appeal from the order granting a new trial, and the defendant cross-appeals from the order denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

In instruction No. 8, the court, after informing the jury that the road grader was a vehicle within the *109 meaning of the statutes regulating the use of motor vehicles upon the public highways, and was required to carry a red tail light, proceeded:

“If you find from the evidence that at the time and place of the collision there was insufficient light to render clearly discernible a person, vehicle or other substantial object on the highway at a distance of 500 feet ahead, then it was the duty of the defendant, King County, to carry at the rear of said grader a lighted rear or tail light capable of exhibiting at any time a red light plainly visible under normal atmospheric conditions for a distance of 500 feet toward the rear, and that failure on the part of King County, or its servant, to have such a rear or tail light, or to have the same lighted, would constitute negligence, and if you find that defendant County did fail to have such a rear light, or failed to have same lighted at said time, and if you further find that such negligence was the proximate cause of the collision and resulting injuries, if any, to plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs were not guilty of contributory negligence, then you are instructed that plaintiffs are entitled to recover in this action.”

While the 1937 legislature enacted a comprehensive law prescribing the law of travel, and regulating the operation and equipment of vehicles upon the public highways, superseding all earlier laws upon the subject, the issue in this case is to be resolved by reference to the laws in force at the time of the accident.

The 1927 legislature enacted chapter 309, p. 767, entitled:

“An Act relating to vehicles and regulating the operation thereof upon the highways of this state; providing for traffic signals and control thereof; providing for the proper equipment and devices to be used thereon, and for the inspection thereof; prescribing the powers and duties of certain officers, the collection, distribution and expenditure of fees; defining offenses and fixing penalties; making appropriations and repealing conflicting act and parts of acts.”

*110 This act was embodied in Remington’s Revised Statutes, chapter 3 of Title 41, §§ 6362-1 to 6362-57 [P. C. §§ 196-1 to 196-57]. Section 2 of the act, p. 767, contains a long schedule of definitions. Vehicle and motor vehicle are defined as follows:

“ (a) ‘Vehicle.’ Every device in, upon or by which any person or property is or may be transported or drawn upon a public highway excepting devices moved by human power or used exclusively upon stationary rails or tracks.
“ (b) ‘Motor Vehicle.’ Every vehicle, as herein defined, which is self-propelled.”

Laws of 1929, chapter 180, p. 455, amended this definition of “vehicle” by substitution of the words “muscular power” for “human power.”

Section 27 of chapter 309, p. 795, as amended by Laws of 1933, chapter 156, p. 574, § 5, provides:

“Every motor vehicle and every trailer or semitrailer which is being drawn at the end of a train of vehicles at the times and under the conditions specified herein shall carry at the rear a rear or tail light capable of exhibiting, at any time, a red light plainly visible under normal atmospheric conditions for a distance of 500 feet toward the rear . . . ”

Chapter 309, as amended, was effective at the time of the accident, and the appellants contend that, under its terms, a road grader was a motor vehicle, and required to carry the prescribed rear light, and that the court properly so instructed the jury. The respondent, on the other hand, relies upon two earlier laws, Laws of 1921, chapters 96 and 108, pp. 251, 322. Both chapters definé “motor vehicle” in identical terms as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 729, 199 Wash. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-king-county-wash-1939.