Rumford v. Snider

197 P.2d 446, 31 Wash. 2d 431, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 279
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1948
DocketNo. 30532.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 446 (Rumford v. Snider) 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
Rumford v. Snider, 197 P.2d 446, 31 Wash. 2d 431, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 279 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

— This is a case in tort arising out of a head-on collision between a 1946 Packard car and a truck and trailer loaded with steel rails and other steel products, the truck, trailer, and contents weighing about seventy thousand pounds.

The collision occurred at about four o’clock on the morning of November 28, 1946, about eight and one-half miles north of Goldendale on state highway No. 8, Federal 97, commonly known as the Satus Pass road. The damage to the truck and trailer was substantial, although trivial when compared with the damage to the Packard car and its occupants. The car was practically demolished. Its driver, Roy M. Rumford, an ex-pilot in the army air force, was grievously injured. His wife also received severe injuries. Their two-month-old son Richard was so seriously injured that he died during the day. Their four-year-old son Dale suffered a broken back and other permanent injuries. Mrs. Rumford’s sister, Mrs. Winifred Mann, suffered no injury other than shock.

The complaint pleaded, in four causes of action, that the truck and trailer were being operated by the defendant Snider for the use and benefit of the defendant United Truck Lines, Inc., and within the scope of his authority as its agent, and that the collision was caused by Snider’s negligence and carelessness,

“ (1) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider failed and neglected to yield the right of way to plaintiff’s automobile approaching from the opposite direction; - ■ ! .
*433 “(2) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider, at the time and place of said collision, was operating defendants’ truck wholly upon his left hand side of said highway;
“ (3) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider failed and neglected to keep a proper lookout for vehicles coming in the opposite direction, particularly plaintiff’s automobile;
“ (4) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider failed and neglected to keep defendants’ truck under control;
“ (5) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider failed and neglected to give any timely and visible or audible signal or warning of the presence of defendants’ truck upon the east lane of said highway;
“(6) In that the defendant Max Edgar Snider when he saw, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have seen and known, that there was danger of a collision with plaintiffs’ automobile, failed and neglected to return defendants’ truck to his right hand lane of travel upon said highway and failed and neglected to exercise ordinary care to avoid such collision when, by the exercise of ordinary care, he could have done so.” (Italics ours.)

The complaint alleged that permanent injuries were suffered by Lieutenant Rumford, as follows:

“(1) The skin graft on the right knee has healed with much scar tissue, the skin over the area of the scar is extremely thin and, upon any strain or undue flexion has, and will in the future continue to, break open and expose the patella and surrounding flesh; that said condition is incurable, permanently painful and will require perpetual wearing of protective devices and pads, preventing said plaintiff from engaging in any occupation requiring more than slight strain or flexion of the knee;
“ (2) The right knee has been rendered extremely weak, due to fiberlation of the quadriceps muscle, and the circumference of said knee has atrophied approximately one inch;
“(3) Partial deafness of both ears, more pronounced in the right;
“(4) Periodic stiffness of the neck;
“(5) Periodic pain in the proximal interphylangeal side of second finger on left hand.”

It was further alleged:

“That, at the time of said collision, the plaintiff was on terminal leave from the United States Army Air Forces in which he held the rank of first lieutenant; that he has since *434 been discharged and offered an opportunity to re-enter active service at approximately $500.00 per month, in-, eluding subsistence; that, prior to said collision, it had been plaintiff’s intention to pursue a military career in the service of the United States, but, solely because of the injuries and damages sustained by him as a result of the carelessness and negligence of defendants as aforesaid, plaintiff is presently unable to pass the physical requirements of such service and will never be able to do so.”

It was further alleged that, supplementing treatment in several army hospitals, Rumford was compelled to personally incur medical, surgical, and hospital expenses amounting to $305.87, and would be compelled to expend' further sums in an amount not definitely known, but ,not' less than $500. It was further alleged that the plaintiffs’ car was damaged in the sum of $2,430, and there was other property of plaintiffs destroyed or damaged of the value of $454. Wherefore, plaintiffs prayed for a judgment on their first cause of action in the sum of $28,689.87.

The second cause of action specifically alleged more than twenty injuries to Mrs. Rumford, some of which, including a broken ankle, are permanent in their nature, and that said injuries necessitated the expenditure of $1,249.09 for medical, surgical, and hospital services; and it was further alleged that expenditures of not less than $350 for such; services would still be required. The prayer of the second cause of action was for recovery of $11,599.09.

In the third cause of action, the plaintiffs, as guardians ad litem of their four-year-old son Dale, alleged that, -as a result of the negligence of the defendants, he received the following injuries:

“Laceration on back of head; bilateral fracture of both clavicles; fracture of the second, third, fourth and fifth dorsal vertebrae and a severe nervous shock;
“That in an effort to cure and heal said injuries said Roy Dale Rumford was required to remain in the Goldendale Hospital until December 2, 1946, during which time he was required to be placed in a hyperextension board; he was transferred to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital on December 2, 1946, where he remained until the latter part of January, 1947; was required to remain in traction until January 15th, 1947, *435 when a body cast was applied and was required to be worn for four months when a Taylor Brace with a cervical attachment was applied, which brace is now being worn and will be required for an indefinite period.
“That as a direct and proximate result of said injuries and of the negligence and carelessness of defendants as aforesaid, the said Roy Dale Rumford has sustained lasting and permanent disabilities as follows:
“(1) A fusion of the third and fourth dorsal vertebral bodies;
'“ (2) A compression of the bodies of the fourth and fifth dorsal vertebrae in which is now an amount of early callous formation with kyphosis and scoliosis;

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Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 446, 31 Wash. 2d 431, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rumford-v-snider-wash-1948.