Symes v. Teagle

410 P.2d 594, 67 Wash. 2d 867, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 859
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1966
Docket37868
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 410 P.2d 594 (Symes v. Teagle) 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
Symes v. Teagle, 410 P.2d 594, 67 Wash. 2d 867, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 859 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Hale, J.

— Francis and Ruth Symes traveled from Canada to Seattle in September, 1962, to see the World’s Fair. They never made it because, the evening before their first intended visit, Ruth Symes fell and broke her hip in defendants’ restaurant.

Defendants own and operate Les Teagle’s Prime Rib Restaurant on North Aurora, overlooking Lake Union. Its east wall, running north and south, composed mainly of large windows, affords patrons a view of the lake from tables spaced along it. An aisleway separates the row of window tables from an inner row. The accident, depicted in disputed and conflicting testimony, occurred as Mrs. Teagle, defendant wife, was leading Mr. and Mrs. Symes to a window table in the southeast corner.

It was around 8 p.m.; the resaurant was busy, but not crowded. With Mrs Teagle in the lead, followed a pace or two by Mrs. Symes, and Mr. .Symes a step or so farther behind, the three walked in single file down the aisleway alongside the window tables. The accident happened as Mrs. Symes- passed a window table being serviced by James Cotton, a university student working as a busboy. He was facing the window, leaning over the table and clearing it, when Mrs. Symes, wearing high heels, walked behind him.

The. Symes’. and Cotton’s versions of the incident differ. Mr. and Mrs. Symes testified that Cotton had his back to Mrs. Symes when she walked past him; that Cotton was facing the window when he suddenly stepped backward, *869 and in doing so his foot caught hers, tripped her and made her fall. She said:

Well, I was following Mrs. Teagle, and then as I came up to the table you have marked “T2”, there was a boy, a busboy, doing something to it, I don’t know whether he was setting it or clearing it, but just as I went to go past him he stepped back and his foot caught mine, and I just went down so suddenly.

Plaintiffs both said that the aisleway was narrow, estimating it at little more than 3 feet.

Defendants, claiming the aisleway to be 7 feet wide based on measurements, described the event differently. Mr. Cotton testified that he was clearing the table when the three walked past him; that he did not step backward at all, but simply turned, felt just the slightest touching on his right arm and saw Mrs. Symes lying on the floor. He denied that he tripped her or even touched her with his foot.

Plaintiffs brought this action to recover for the serious and painful injuries sustained by Mrs. Symes. Although the trial court withdrew contributory negligence as an issue, the jury exonerated the defendants and their employees of the claimed negligence by returning a defense verdict. From a judgment of dismissal entered on the verdict, plaintiffs appeal, making seven assignments of error. We believe two of them merit discussion.

Before considering these two assignments of error, we should point out that plaintiffs did not claim negligence in the construction, maintenance or illumination of the carpeted floor on which Mrs. Symes fell. Except for evidence as to the width of the aisleway, plaintiffs’ claims of negligence arise from and center about the actions of James Cotton, the busboy, in turning away or stepping back from the table he was then clearing. With contributory negligence eliminated as a defense, the jury obviously reconciled the conflicting evidence in Cotton’s favor, and by its verdict found that plaintiffs had failed to prove actionable negligence. Blood v. Allied Stores Corp., 62 Wn.2d 187, 381 P.2d 742 (1963). Where substantial evidence supports the ver *870 diet, our review is limited to errors assigned which do not involve weighing the evidence.

Plaintiffs claim that defense counsel injected the issue of unavoidable accident into the case in his opening statement and that the court committed error in refusing to give plaintiffs’ requested instruction withdrawing that issue. In the opening statement, defense counsel said that the evidence would prove Cotton free of negligence and that the accident probably occurred because of Mrs. Symes’ fault. He twice referred to the event as an unfortunate accident.

Plaintiffs contend that, when the court later in the trial withdrew from the jury contributory negligence as a defense, the reference to unfortunate accident in the opening statement inevitably left the defense of unavoidable accident in issue. They accordingly requested an instruction that “there is no evidence that Mrs. Symes’ injury occurred as the result of an unavoidable accident and that issue is withdrawn from your consideration.” The court refused the request and gave no instruction whatever on unavoidable accident.

Unless that issue can be said to have entered the case by way of defendants’ opening statement, the idea of unavoidable accident did not otherwise enter or exist in the case to be withdrawn. That counsel’s remark put this issue before the jury when, in his opening statement, he said that the proof would show no negligence on either Cotton’s or Teagles’ part and that Mrs. Symes’ injuries arose out of an unfortunate accident, seems quite unlikely. The word unfortunate obviously was used by counsel in the sense of describing a regrettable and nonvolitional event —an incident from defendants’ point of view due to no actions or omissions of defendants and their employees. Characterizing the incident as unfortunate merely expressed defendants’ position that the expected proof would show plaintiff wife had suffered a misfortune of which the defendants were blameless — a misfortune due neither to their negligent acts nor omissions. We agree, therefore, with the trial court that the issue of unavoidable accident *871 was not thus left in the case to be withdrawn when the court withdrew contributory negligence as an issue. It may be as erroneous to withdraw by instructions something not in issue as to inject into the case by instructions an issue not in evidence.

Plaintiffs also assign error to the court’s ruling that the admission of selected portions of James Cotton’s pretrial discovery deposition rendered all other relevant parts of the deposition admissible, including certain unresponsive answers. In February, 1963, well in advance of trial, plaintiffs had taken Cotton’s pretrial discovery deposition pursuant to Rule of Pleading, Practice, and Procedure 26, RCW vol. 0, 4 Orland, Wash. Prac. 5. At trial, they requested leave to “read certain portions of the deposition of Mr. Cotton.” The court, satisfied that plaintiffs had made a legitimate but fruitless effort to subpoena Cotton, granted leave, and plaintiffs then read more than 10 pages of the deposition to the jury, omitting questions and answers occasionally without objection. At page 13, defendants objected to any further skipping and insisted that the deposition be read in its entirety without further omissions. To the court’s ruling that the entire deposition became admissible on behalf of the defendants with the reading of a part thereof by plaintiffs, including unresponsive answers, plaintiffs level their claim of error.

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Bluebook (online)
410 P.2d 594, 67 Wash. 2d 867, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/symes-v-teagle-wash-1966.