Strong v. Ernst

14 P.2d 697, 169 Wash. 617, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 788
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketNo. 23696. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 697 (Strong v. Ernst) 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
Strong v. Ernst, 14 P.2d 697, 169 Wash. 617, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 788 (Wash. 1932).

Opinion

*618 Parker, J.

The plaintiffs, Strong and wife, commenced this action in the superior court for Yakima county seeking recovery of damages for personal injuries to both of them, and also for injuries to their automobile in which they were riding; such damages being claimed by them as the result of the negligent driving of the automobile of the defendant, Ernst, causing the cars to come into collision at the intersection of an arterial highway and a non-arterial county road in that county.

Upon the issues of negligence of the driver of the defendant’s car, the defendant’s liability for any such negligence, and the contributory negligence of Mr. Strong, the driver of the plaintiffs ’ car, the cause proceeded to trial in the superior court for Yakima county, sitting with a jury; which trial resulted in verdict and judgment awarding to the plaintiffs recovery against the defendant, from which he has appealed to this court.

The principal question here to be determined is whether or not the evidence supports any recovery against the defendant. We think the controlling facts, as the evidence warranted the jury in viewing them, may be summarized as follows:

The Naches highway, a main, arterial state highway, runs northerly from the city of Yakima. A non-arterial county road comes into the highway from a northwesterly direction some four or five miles northerly from Yakima. It does not cross the highway.

The highway has an oiled roadway surface twenty-two feet wide. This oiled surface is referred to generally as a pavement, though that seems not strictly correct. However, it well defines the traveled roadway portion of the highway.

The road has a well-improved graveled surface roadway about eighteen feet wide, which widens out *619 in fan-shape, so that it is about one hundred feet wide where it joins the highway, measured along the west side of the pavement; this to enable traffic to easily turn north or south onto the highway, or from the highway onto the road. This fan widening commences about one hundred feet northwesterly from the edge of the pavement, and the whole of its surface is practically on the same level as the pavement of the highway ; and, while the whole of it is fairly well suited for driving over, and is, in fact, so used to a considerable extent, the turning of traffic onto and from the highway has made a somewhat distinguishable fork in the general lines of travel to and from the highway.

The road runs northwesterly along the southwesterly bank of the Naches river. There is a bridge on the highway crossing the Naches river, the southwesterly corner of which is practically at the north corner of the fan-shaped portion of the road. There is a steep hill rising along close to the west side of the highway and the southwesterly side of the fan-shaped portion of the road.

There is a stop sign, as the law provides, located near the southwesterly side of the fan-shaped portion of the road twenty-one feet distant from the west edge of the pavement of the highway, measured at right angles from the pavement, and approximately forty-five feet distant from the west edge of the pavement, measured along the southwesterly edge of the traveled portion of the road.

A person driving south across the bridge on his right-hand side of the bridge and pavement, has an unobstructed view from the bridge south along the pavement for a distance of considerably more than two hundred feet; that is, for a considerable distance of more than a hundred feet beyond the extreme southerly point of the fan-shaped portion of the road. A *620 person driving north along the pavement on his right-hand side thereof from a distance of a hundred feet south of the south corner of the fan-shaped portion of the road, has an unobstructed view north to the bridge and beyond, and also of a considerable part of the fan-shaped portion of the road, though his line of vision would probably not extend off the pavement to the west so as to have in view the stop sign.

In the afternoon of the day of the accident, the plaintiffs were proceeding south on the highway, approaching the bridge and the intersection. They were riding in their light auto truck, Mr. Strong driving. "When they came to the south end of the bridge, they saw, at a distance of about two hundred feet, the defendant’s Marmon car approaching north on the highway; that is, approaching at a point at about one hundred feet south of the south corner of the fan-shaped portion of the road.

As Mr. Strong observed the defendant’s car, he thought it tended to go over to and along the westerly half of the pavement; that is, on its left side of the pavement. He says, in substance, that he was then induced to turn to his right off the pavement soon after leaving the bridge, as a matter of extreme caution. He passed the stop sign on his right near the southwesterly edge of the fan-shaped portion of the road.

At a point a short distance farther on, the defendant’s car, having suddenly turned to the left from the pavement, manifestly to go onto the road, came in violent collision with the plaintiffs’ truck, which was then within eight or ten feet of the southwesterly edge of the fan-shaped portion of the road and at some point, as to which the evidence is conflicting, between the stop sign and the extreme south corner of the fan-shaped portion of the road.

The jury could well believe from the evidence that *621 the plaintiffs’ truck was at all times, after leaving the bridge, even while off the pavement, within plain view of the driver of the defendant’s car. The plaintiffs’ truck was proceeding at a rate of not more than twenty miles per hour, probably much less at the time of the collision. The defendant’s car was proceeding at about twenty-five miles per hour up to the moment of the collision.

The driver of the defendant’s car indicated an intention to turn from the highway onto the road by the usual sign of holding out her hand. Apparently, Mr. Strong did not notice this. However, it seems plain that the defendant’s car had abundant opportunity to turn from the highway onto the road without striking the plaintiffs’ car at the place where the cars came into collision. There was, at all events, abundant space for the defendant’s car to pass behind the plaintiffs’ car, in view of the wide fan-shaped portion of the road bordering upon the pavement of the highway.

The plaintiffs’ car was not stopped when it came opposite the stop sign. Mr. Strong, manifestly, was proceeding upon the assumption that he was not required to stop upon his coming back upon the pavement, which he contemplated doing after passing defendant’s car; this manifestly because he did not consider that he was coming into the highway off the road, and that his course after leaving the bridge would not so indicate to anyone approaching from the south on the highway.

The evidence is in serious conflict in certain important particulars. We have stated the facts as the jury had the right to, and apparently did, view them.

The defendant’s car was being driven by a young lady who was his invited guest. He was taking her to a picnic dance, and was permitting her to drive his car, he sitting to her right in the front seat.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Zamora
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2012
Straffus v. Barclay
219 S.W.2d 65 (Texas Supreme Court, 1949)
Glick v. Ropes
138 P.2d 858 (Washington Supreme Court, 1943)
Mayer v. Puryear
115 F.2d 675 (Fourth Circuit, 1940)
Lee v. City Brewing Corporation
18 N.E.2d 628 (New York Court of Appeals, 1939)
Landis v. Wick
59 P.2d 403 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1936)
Grimes v. Fraser
35 P.2d 88 (Washington Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 697, 169 Wash. 617, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-ernst-wash-1932.