Sigol v. Kaplan

266 P. 154, 147 Wash. 269
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1928
DocketNo. 20967. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 266 P. 154 (Sigol v. Kaplan) 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
Sigol v. Kaplan, 266 P. 154, 147 Wash. 269 (Wash. 1928).

Opinions

Parker, J.

The plaintiff, Bennie. Sigol, a minor, commenced his action in the superior court for King county, by his mother, his guardian ad litem, seeking recovery of damages for his personal injuries claimed as the result of the negligent driving by the defendant, Kaplan, of his automobile. At the same time, the *270 plaintiff, Rose Sigol, a widow, mother of Bennie, commenced her action in the same court, seeking recovery of damages in the incurring of expense by her incident to hospital and medical care of her son, Bennie, rendered necessary by the same negligent driving by the defendant of his automobile. The controlling facts being eoncededly common to both actions, in so far as the questions of negligence and contributory negligence were concerned, and differing only as to measure of damages, the actions were, by consent of all parties, tried simultaneously in the superior court before the same jury. The trial resulted in a verdict being rendered in favor of the plaintiff Bennie Sigol, awarding him recovery in the sum of two hundred dollars, and a verdict being rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Rose Sigol, in the sum of five hundred eighty dollars. A motion for new trial was made in behalf of the plaintiff Bennie Sigol, principally upon the ground of inadequate award of damages. That motion was .disposed of and final judgment rendered awarding recovery to him, as follows:

“ . . . the jury having rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant in the sum of $200 . .' . and the court having ordered that plaintiff’s motion for a new trial be granted unless plaintiff accepts an increase of the said verdict from $200 to the sum of $800, and plaintiff having in open court elected to accept said increased verdict, and the court being in the premises fully • advised,' it is now therefore hereby
■ 14 Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that plaintiff have and recover from the defendant the sum of $800, together with his costs and disbursements herein to be taxed.
“To all of which defendant excepts and exception allowed.”

Final judgment was rendered awarding recovery to the plaintiff Rose Sigol, in the sum of five hundred *271 eighty dollars, in accordance with the verdict rendered' in her favor. From each of these judgments, the defendant Kaplan has appealed to this court.

The controlling facts, as we think the jury were warranted in believing, and manifestly did believe them to exist, may be summarized as follows: Yesler Way, a paved public street in Seattle, runs east and west. Upon its surface there is maintained a double track, cable street railway line. The paved roadway is forty-two feet wide between the sidewalk curbs. It is approximately fourteen feet from the respective curbs to the outer rails of the respective tracks, and hence approximately fourteen feet from one outer rail to the other outer rail. Yesler Way is intersected at right angles by 18th avenue, and also by 19th avenue, two hundred fifty-six feet to the east. Yesler Way has no intersecting public alley between these avenues. There is a private driveway opening into Yesler Way from the south, midway between these avenues. The injury to Bennie Sigol here in question occurred on the roadway of Yesler Way nearly opposite the entrance of this private driveway. From that place there is a clear, unobstructed view along Yesler Way to the east for a distance of four hundred fifty feet, when there is no traffic obstructing the view.

Bennie Sigol was, at the time in question, a normal boy very nearly twelve years old. He was then riding a bicycle at a slow pace westerly along the paved roadway of Yesler Way near the northerly curb. Coming to a point nearly opposite the private driveway on the south, he turned south, to his left, maintaining approximately the same slow speed, intending to cross the roadway into the driveway. He testified that just before, or as he turned to his left, he looked back to the east to see if any automobiles or street cars were coming from that direction, and saw none; that he then *272 looked to the west to see if there were any automobiles or street cars coming from that direction, and saw none.

When he had arrived between the rails of the southerly car track, and thus well south of the center line of Yesler Way, he was struck by appellant’s automobile, being driven by appellant westerly along Yesler Way at a rate of speed estimated by several witnesses at from twenty-five to thirty miles per hour. The fact that Bennie Sigol was between the rails of the southerly track, and thus clearly south of the center line of Yesler Way, is testified to by eye witnesses, though he himself does not seem sure of being then that far south of the center line of Yesler Way. Appellant’s automobile did not come to a stop until it had nearly reached 18th avenue, some one hundred and twenty-five feet to the west of where it had struck Bennie Sigol and his bicycle.

Appellant was driving his automobile, nearly the whole of the distance between 18th and 19th avenue, south of the center line of Yesler Way. No sounding of any horn or other signal was made from appellant’s automobile as it approached Bennie Sigol on his bicycle. Seemingly, Bennie Sigol should have seen the approach of appellant’s automobile from the east, by even a somewhat casual observation, but apparently, as the jury might have believed, his looking to the east was prompted solely by his intent to see if any automobile or street car was approaching from that direction along the northerly half of the roadway; that is, along that portion of the roadway which westbound traffic should proceed, and that this accounted for his failure to take notice of appellant’s automobile approaching from the east along a course south of the center line of Yesler Way.

There were no street cars, automobiles or other ve- *273 hides moving upon Yesler Way within view of the place of the accident at the time it occurred, other than appellant’s automobile and Bennie Sigol’s bicycle; nor were there within such view even any parked vehicles, other than two or three automobiles which were parked at the curb some distance away. No evidence was introduced in behalf of appellant.

It is contended in behalf of appellant that the evidence fails to support either of these judgments; in that it fails to show negligence on the part of appellant, and in that it shows contributory negligence on the part of Bennie Sigol; and that the trial court erred in refusing to take the case from the jury and so decide as a matter of law, in response to appropriate and timely motions made in that behalf. It seems to us there is but little room for arguing that the evidence was not sufficient to carry the case to the jury touching the question of appellant’s negligence as a proximate cause of the resultant injury to Bennie Sigol.

The question of whether or not, in the light of the facts above summarized, it should be decided as a matter of law that Bennie Sigol was guilty of contributory negligence presents a somewhat more difficult question to answer. Bennie Sigol violated the law in turning to the left and crossing the roadway at a point between the intersections of Yesler Way and 18th and 19th avenues.

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Bluebook (online)
266 P. 154, 147 Wash. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sigol-v-kaplan-wash-1928.