Robinson v. Ebert

39 P.2d 992, 180 Wash. 387, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 457
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1935
DocketNo. 25011. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 992 (Robinson v. Ebert) 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
Robinson v. Ebert, 39 P.2d 992, 180 Wash. 387, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 457 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Beals, J.

For many years, defendant E. C. Ebert was a resident of Kitsap county, engaged in the business of banking. Mr. and Mrs. Ebert and their family, including their son, defendant- E. Dean Ebert (who during the year 1931 was a minor of the age of nine *389 teen years), resided in the city of Bremerton. Mr. Ebert owned an automobile, which he kept in the two-car garage on his home lot.

Defendant Bremerton Buick Company was incorporated during the month of November, 1931, with a capital stock of two thousand dollars, and commenced business December 1 following. E. C. Ebert subscribed for six hundred dollars of the capital stock, and Dean Ebert also purchased a few shares of the stock and was made assistant treasurer of the corporation, keeping its books at night, for which he received $12.50 a week. At this time, Dean was a teller in his father’s bank, for which he received sixty dollars a month.

December 2, Dean purchased through the Bremer-ton Buick Company (which will hereinafter be referred to as the Buick Co.) a Buick sedan, for which he testified that he paid $1,131.80 cash, of which he borrowed eight hundred dollars from his father’s bank, secured by a chattel mortgage on the sedan. Dean installed the new car in his father’s garage, and used it according to his pleasure.

For several years prior to 1931, plaintiff, Edith Robinson, and one J. A. C. Martell had been living together as husband and wife, although they had never legally assumed that relation. Just before midnight, December 25, 1931, plaintiff, with Mr. Martell, in the latter’s Ford car, which Mr. Martell was driving, was proceeding in an easterly direction along state highway No. 14 a little less than a mile west of Bremer-ton. At the same time, Dean Ebert, driving his sedan, was proceeding along the same road in a westerly direction, accompanied by his friend Willard Parker. The two automobiles collided, with the result that Mr. Martell was killed and plaintiff injured.

In December, 1932, plaintiff instituted this action, *390 seeking to recover damages which she alleged were due her by way of compensation for her injuries. She named as defendants E. C. and Euth Ebert (the parents of Dean Ebert), E. Dean Ebert, and Bremer-ton Buick Company, a corporation. The action was tried upon the amended complaint, and resulted in a verdict against all the defendants in the sum of $15,-351. The trial court thereafter entered judgment in favor of defendant Buick Co. notwithstanding the verdict, and entered judgment on the verdict against the other defendants.

Defendants Ebert have appealed from the judgment against them, and plaintiff has cross-appealed from the ruling of the trial court granting the motion of the Buick Co. for judgment in its favor notwithstanding the verdict. For convenience, Edith Eobinson will be referred to as respondent, the Eberts as appellants, and respondent Buick Co. by its name.

Appellants have moved for an order striking respondent’s answering brief because of delay in filing the same. Undue delay in filing a brief will be penalized by directing that no costs be allowed on account of such brief in case the party filing the same prevails in the action. Mere delay in filing a brief does not justify an order striking the same from the records. Appellants’ motion is accordingly denied.

Appellants assign error upon the overruling of their demurrer to the complaint and upon the denial of their challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and of their motions for judgment at the close of the case. They also assign error upon the denial of their motions for judgment in their favor notwithstanding the verdict or in the alternative for a new trial, upon the refusal of the trial court to reduce the amount of the verdict, and upon the entry of judgment against them. They also complain of certain rulings of the trial court *391 in rejecting evidence which they offered and in overruling their objection to evidence offered by respondent. They also assign many errors upon instructions given by the court, and upon the court’s refusal to give two instructions requested by appellant Dean Ebert.

Respondent assigns error upon the order of the trial'court granting respondent Buick Co.’s motion for judgment in its favor notwithstanding the verdict, and upon the entry of judgment in accordance with this ruling.

We are clearly of the opinion that the complaint stated a cause of action, and that the trial court did not err in overruling the demurrer thereto.

We shall next discuss the questions involving the sufficiency of the evidence to carry the case to the jury as to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Ebert. Appellant E. C. Ebert testified that his son Dean was of a frugal disposition, and had saved some money concerning which the witness knew nothing prior to December, 1931, and that the witness was not advised concerning his son’s contemplated purchase of an automobile, nor, when the car appeared in the family garage, did he know that the car had been bought by the boy.

Dean Ebert testified that he knew that his father would object to his buying a car, and that he kept his plan to make such an investment a secret from his father; that, upon the organization of the Buick Co., he selected in Seattle a Buick sedan which the Buick Co. bought for him; that he later paid the chattel mortgage in monthly installments according to its terms out of the money which he earned. He further testified that he received the car December 2, and, desiring a license for the month remaining of the year 1931, appropriated a discarded set of dealer’s license plates originally issued to the Mann Motor Company, *392 which may be said to be the predecessor of the Buick Co., and placed these license plates upon his car. In this connection, it is admitted that Dean Ebert had no right whatsoever to use these license plates, and that, in so doing, he was violating the law. The witness also admitted that his testimony at the inquest and on a previous trial of this action had differed from that given by him upon the trial now being considered.

Examination of the record convinces us that the trial court did not err in submitting the case to the jury as to Mr. and Mrs. Ebert. While a considerable portion of the testimony given by E. C. Ebert and his son Dean was not specifically denied or explained by other testimony on behalf of respondent, the Eberts’ testimony, being, as it was, that of interested parties, was rightly submitted to the jury with the other evidence in the case for their consideration. The evidence as a whole does not require a holding that Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Ebert were entitled to judgment in their favor as matter of law.

In the amended complaint, it was alleged that Dean Ebert was operating the automobile

“ . . . both as a family car, with the knowledge and consent of and for the use and benefit of the community composed of E. C. Ebert and his wife, the parents of E. Dean Ebert, and for the use and benefit of the defendant Bremerton Buick Company. That at the time in question the said automobile was the common property of all of the defendants herein.”

A special interrogatory was submitted to the jury, which, with the jury’s answer, reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 992, 180 Wash. 387, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-ebert-wash-1935.