Ruff v. Fruit Delivery Co.

157 P.2d 730, 22 Wash. 2d 708, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 397
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1945
DocketNo. 29474.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 730 (Ruff v. Fruit Delivery 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
Ruff v. Fruit Delivery Co., 157 P.2d 730, 22 Wash. 2d 708, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 397 (Wash. 1945).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

Plaintiff, Pauline Evelyn Ruff, guardian ad litem of her two minor sons, brought two separate actions to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the minors in a collision between an automobile, in which the plaintiff and three members of her family were riding, and a truck owned by a corporation and operated at the time by its employee. The owner, the employee, and the latter’s wife were all made defendants in both actions. The two causes were consolidated for trial. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case in chief, the defendants, challenging the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict against them, or any of them, moved for a nonsuit. The motion was denied. At the conclusion of all the evidence, defendants moved for a directed verdict or, in the alternative, for the dismissal of the jury and entry of judgment in defendants’ favor. That motion was also denied. The matter was then submitted to the jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff in each cause. The defendants thereafter moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdicts and also for a new trial. The court, after extended argument and considerable study *710 of the record, entered judgment dismissing the actions notwithstanding the verdicts and also, in the alternative, granting defendants a new trial, pursuant to the prescribed procedure in such cases. From that judgment plaintiff appealed.

The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the verdicts are supported by substantial evidence of negligence on the part of the driver of the truck at and immediately prior to the time of the collision.

The accident occurred between two forty-five and three o’clock in the morning of June 29, 1942, at a point on the Snoqualmie Pass highway about three miles east of Cle Elum. In that vicinity the highway extends east and west, and is virtually straight and practically level for a distance of five or six miles. The paved portion of the roadway is twenty feet wide, with a distinct center line running between the two ten-foot lanes, one of which accommodates east-bound traffic and the other west-bound traffic. Beyond, and on each side of the pavement, is a graveled shoulder three or four feet wide, which drops off at its outer edge into a ditch about five feet deep. The night, or early morning, on which the accident occurred was clear; no traffic, other than the two motor vehicles here involved, was on the highway in that vicinity at the time; and the lights from vehicles approaching each other from opposite direcr tions were easily visible for a distance of a mile or more.

As will appear a little later, one of the most significant circumstances tending to explain the manner in which the accident occurred is the fact that a heavy dew had settled upon the highway, in consequence of which the wheel tracks of the two vehicles as they approached the point of impact were plainly discernible for a considerable time after the collision occurred.

Mr. Gray Everett Ruff, husband of the appellant and father of the two minors, was driving a 1932 DeSoto sedan automobile in an easterly direction from Seattle towards Yakima; Mrs. Ruff occupied the front seat with her husband; their two sons, Clifford aged sixteen years, and Earl aged twelve years, were asleep iipon the back seat. At *711 the same time, a five-ton International truck, owned by the respondent Fruit Delivery Company and driven by the company’s employee, respondent Harold Arnold, was proceeding in a westerly direction, from Yakima towards Seattle. Respondent Ella Arnold, wife of the respondent driver,- occupied the seat of the truck by the side of her husband.

The truck was equipped with a body seven feet ten inches in width and carried a load of fruit weighing sixteen thousand pounds. The total gross weight of the truck and cargo was thus twenty-six thousand pounds. Both vehicles were traveling at about the same speed, estimated at thirty-five miles an hour.

At the moment of impact, the relative positions of the two vehicles and the directions in which they were then respectively headed were such as to bring the left end of the front bumper of the truck into violent contact with the left-hand side of the left front fender of the sedan directly over its left wheel. Immediately upon impact, the left front wheel of the truck was knocked completely off; the right front wheel was bent underneath the axle; and all the brake linings were broken. The left front end of the truck, moving forward, fused with the left rear side of the sedan, and the entire mass hurtled in an arc, in a southwesterly direction, across the south side of the highway, over the graveled shoulder, and partly into the ditch. The exact point upon the highway at which the impact occurred is somewhat in dispute, but it is conceded by all parties that it took place within not more than a foot and a half from the center line, whether upon the one side or the other thereof. Further details with respect to the movements of the two motor vehicles in their approach towards each other immediately before the collision will be given later.

In consequence of the collision, Mr. Ruff sustained injuries causing his death within an hour or two after the accident; Mrs. Ruff suffered a severe shock, cuts about her face and on both of her lower limbs, the loss of sight of her right eye, and several broken ribs; the minor son' Clifford sustained a fracture of his pelvis and injuries to his left hip *712 and one of his knees, rendering him a permanent cripple; and the minor son Earl, although apparently not permanently injured, was seriously hurt, sustaining a skull fracture which rendered him unconscious for a week immediately following the collision. Mrs. Arnold, who was seated in the truck, sustained some injuries to her limbs, but these were not serious; she did, however, suffer a severe shock resulting in a state of nervousness which was still troubling her at the time of the trial, as was apparent from her agitation while upon the witness stand. Mr. Arnold, the truck driver, seemingly sustained no injuries..

The only eyewitnesses who testified concerning the events transpiring immediately before and after the collision were Mr. and Mrs. Arnold, the truck driver and his wife. The two injured minors had been asleep for some time, and their testimony related only to their own personal injuries. Mrs. Ruff had no recollection of anything that occurred between the time the sedan in which she was riding left Cle Elum, traveling eastwardly, and the time she found herself standing by the side of her automobile after the accident. Aside from her description, of the injuries sustained by herself and her two sons, her testimony related solely to their trip from Yakima to various places west of the Cascade mountains and the return trip as far as Cle Elum. Her testimony upon that subject may be summarized as follows:

' The party, consisting of herself, her husband, and their two sons, left their home in Yakima on Friday afternoon before the accident at about five-thirty, intending to spend the weekend with various relatives in Tacoma and elsewhere. They arrived in' Tacoma about ten o’clock that evening and went to the home of Mr. Ruff’s sister, where they remained that night, retiring at about eleven-thirty p. m. The next day they had lunch with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 730, 22 Wash. 2d 708, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruff-v-fruit-delivery-co-wash-1945.