Settles v. Johnson

298 P. 690, 162 Wash. 466, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1007
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1931
DocketNo. 22729. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 298 P. 690 (Settles v. Johnson) 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
Settles v. Johnson, 298 P. 690, 162 Wash. 466, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1007 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

On March 31, 1929, one Henry J. Settles, while on a public street in the city of Belling-ham, known as the Boulevard, was run over and killed by an automobile owned and driven by the appellant, Karl G-. Johnson. His wife, Hazel E. Settles, was appointed. administratrix of his estate, and later on brought this action on behalf of herself and on behalf of a minor daughter of the deceased against Johnson to recover in damages for his death. There was a trial by jury, in which trial a verdict was returned in favor of the administratrix in the sum of five thousand dollars. From the judgment entered on the verdict, Johnson appeals.

The first of the assignments of error made on behalf of the appellant questions the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.. On this question the jury, of course, had the right to accept as true that part of the evidence which tended to support their verdict, disregarding that which was contrary thereto. Our inquiry, therefore, is whether there was any substantial evidence which supports the jury’s findings.

As to certain of the facts, there is little or no dispute. The boulevard mentioned extends in a northerly and southerly direction, and is constructed on the side of a hill. On its easterly side there is a somewhat steep bluff, and on the westerly side the slope is downward. The roadway is thirty-seven and one-half feet wide, paved for its full width, having on its easterly side a concrete sidewalk six and one-half feet wide. On its *468 westerly side there is a substantial fence,- constructed parallel with and close to the edge of the pavement. For a considerable distance both northerly and southerly from the place of the accident there are no intersecting or cross streets. There are a number of houses on the easterly side of the street, constructed at an elevation above the level of the roadway.

At about two o’clock in the afternoon of the day of the accident, Settles and his wife drove out on the boulevard in an automobile for the purpose of viewing a house they were contemplating leasing. They drove in a southerly direction, and, when they reached a point opposite the house they intended viewing, parked their automobile close to the fence on the westerly side of the street. They then left their automobile, walked across the street and up steps leading to the house they desired to view. After completing their examination of the house, they started back to their automobile. As they reached the street, the appellant was driving his automobile in a southerly direction along the street. Mrs. Settles crossed the street ahead of the automobile. Settles himself was struck by the automobile at some point in the street, the place being a matter of dispute. Settles was thrown by the blow which struck him oft the paved highway, across the sidewalk, and onto the ground between the sidewalk and the rise of the hill on that side of the street.

The accident occurred on a bright day, and at a timé when there was no other traffic on the street in the immediate vicinity of the accident. The appellant’s automobile, after striking Settles, swerved to its left, striking the curb of the street on that side and then going a considerable distance before it was brought to a stop.

As to the manner in which the accident causing the injury happened, the testimony supporting the verdict is principally that of Mrs. Settles. She testifies that, *469 after she crossed the street and reached her own automobile, she turned and looked for her husband. She then saw that he had not attempted to cross the street ahead of the appellant’s automobile. Continuing, she further testified (we quote from the abstract):

“He [the witness’s husband] was standing where we had originally stepped off the sidewalk. The car was coming from the north, and he was facing it, standing about three feet from the sidewalk facing it and it was coming toward him. It wasn’t taking a straight line, kind of zigzagging, never slackening up speed. The speed was just the same. I should judge the speed of the car was about fifty miles an hour. As I saw him coming near my husband he was kind of swaying and Henry stood there with his hands like this (wit: ness indicates hands up to face). When the automobile struck my husband he was facing it. He was hit and thrown up in the air and then he went through the air, head over heels. ...”

The appellant’s version of the transaction is that he was driving along the westerly side of the street, which was to him the right-hand side, at a speed not to exceed twenty-five miles an hour in a direct course without zigzagging; that he saw Settles crossing the street and signalled to him with the automobile horn; that Settles looked in his direction but kept on his course; that he swerved his car slightly to the left intending to pass behind Settles, and that he would have missed him by “two feet” had not Settles jumped backwards in front of his automobile just as the automobile reached him. He places the position of Settles at the time he was struck as some five to eight feet in the street from his own automobile, or some fifteen feet from the curb on the westerly side of the street, the opposite side from that which Mrs. Settles testified he was on when struck.

The appellant argues that the testimony of Mrs. Settles is so far improbable as to be unworthy of belief, *470 and that the jury should not be permitted to found a judgment upon it. But we see nothing- improbable in it. Obviously, the accident could have happened in the manner she said it happened, and we think her version of it is supported by the position of Settles’ body after he was struck. The body was on the same side of the street on which she testified he was standing at the time he was struck, and in the direction it would be thrown if struck on that side of the street by an automobile approaching directly towards him.

Indeed, we think her statement is much more probable than that of the appellant himself. If Settles was at the place in the street at the time he was struck that the appellant testifies he was, it is hardly conceivable that his body could have been thrown from that place to the place it was found, by being struck by an automobile travelling at no greater speed than twenty-five miles an hour, and it is highly improbable that the automobile would have struck the curb on that side of the street at a point it did so strike it, if the situation was such as the appellant describes. We cannot find, therefore, that the evidence on the part of the respondent was so far unbelievable as to require the court to say no verdict can stand upon it. It is our conclusion therefore that the challenge to the evidence was properly denied.

Of the assignments of error which are thought to require a new trial, the first to be noticed is an instruction involving the doctrine of last clear chance. The instruction need not be set out here at length. It followed almost verbatim that quoted in the case of Stephenson v. Parton, 89 Wash. 653, 155 Pac. 147 (l. c. pp. 658-659). The objection is, however, not to the form of the instruction but to its applicability. It is argued that the evidence in the case before us does not *471 present a situation on which the doctrine invoked can be predicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 P. 690, 162 Wash. 466, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/settles-v-johnson-wash-1931.