Traver v. Spokane Street Railway Co.

65 P. 284, 25 Wash. 225, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 383
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1901
DocketNo. 3708
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 65 P. 284 (Traver v. Spokane Street Railway Co.) 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
Traver v. Spokane Street Railway Co., 65 P. 284, 25 Wash. 225, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 383 (Wash. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court ivas delivered by

White, J.

The appellant, at the time of the injury complained of, operated in the city of Spokane a street railway by electricity. The respondent alleged in part in his complaint, that on the 16th day of Mardh, 1899, the appellant was running a car in a westerly direction on Front avenue, and respondent ivas, at the same time, traveling in his buggy in an easterly direction on said avenue, and, at a point about one hundred feet west of the intersection of Bernard street with Front avenue, respondent ivas in the act of crossing appellant’s track, when appellant so negligently and unskillfully conducted itself in the management of said car that, through the negligence of appellant and its servants in running and managing said car, the same ivas then and there run by appellant and its servants with great force up.on and against respondent’s buggy in which he ivas riding, and in consequence thereof the buggy was overturned and respondent ivas thrown to the ground, whereby he ivas injured; that, at the time appellant’s car collided with respondent’s buggy, the car was being run by appellant at a higher rate of speed than eight miles an hour, and that no hell was rung or other warning of the approach of the car given by appellant; that, by ordinance of the city of Spokane, within the fire limits (where the accident occurred), it ivas provided that no motorman, conductor, or other person should move any car on a street railroad track at a higher rate of speed than eight miles per hour, or at a greater rate of speed than twelve miles per hour outside said fire limits. The answer to the complaint was a general denial and the plea of contributory negligence. The respondent testified substantially as folloAvs: [229]*229That he first became a resident of Spokane Falls (now Spokane) in 1881, and had lived in that city for the last two years before the accident; that on the 16th of March, 1899, he was driving eastward on Front avenue, between Washington and Bernard streets, on the north side of the avenue and left hand side of the railway track, and that he had traveled the better part of a block behind a loaded dray or truck, close up to the truck; that, the movement of the truck being slower than he liked, he concluded he would pass it, so he turned to the right of the truck, which act necessarily brought the wheel of his buggy astride of the left track of the street car; that he got his horse about straightened to the right of the truck, — when he was to the right of the hind wheel of the truck, — when he saw in the distance a street car coming at an unusual rate of speed; that this impressed him and, on the spur of the moment, he cheeked his horse at once; that, as he was more to the left side of the track than the right, he naturally turned back the way he came; that he was watching the car to see if it checked its speed; that he could not observe anything of that kind at all until it got very near to him; that he was alarmed at the rate of speed at which the car was coming, and did the best he could to get his horse off, but before he entirely got clear of the track the car fender struck the hind wheel of his buggy in a slanting way, so that it lifted it, then it appeared to let go, and then it seemed to move on, and tilted up the buggy, and he was spilled out and fell upon his shoulder, lie was in an op(en buggy, driving a single horse. He could not say how fast the car was running, but it seemed to him that it was running faster than he had ever seen a street car run; that when he first -saw the car it was about one hundred and fifty feet from him. “Question: Did you see the car as soon as you drove from behind the truck ? [230]*230Answer: Well, I was guiding my horse, and perhaps my horse got straightened before I saw it.” The truck was not in the way in pulling the horse back. When he saw the car he kept himself busy trying to get off the track, and he thought he did his best to get off the track. He did not loolc or listen for a car before drivinq on the trade. When he got on the track he saw the car and realized his dangerous position. He first saw the car when the front wheel of his buggy was on the track, and the horse’s head was then to the right of the hind wheel of the truck; that he considered that he could get off quicker by turning back, in place of driving across the track; that he checked his horse suddenly, and was scared when he saw the car coming ; that it was nearer back than across. He did not jump out of the buggy because he wanted to save everything. He had hold of the lines. The cross piece to which the singletree of the buggy was attached broke at the time the fender lifted up> the wheel of the buggy. He held on to the lines as the horse was going obliquely away from the track. “Question: How, is it not a fact that those lines — - holding on to them, — is what pulled you out of that buggy ? Answer: Hot at all; it was safer to hold on to them than to let go.” The truck was a loaded truck. The load on the top of the truck was so high that it obscured the view in front. It was up grade from Bernard street to Division street, but where the accident happened it was level. The car was about the center of Bernard street when respondent saw it. He presumed there was sufficient space within the curb of the street and the truck to have passed the truck on the left, but that the main width of the street was to the right of the truck, and, presuming the street te be clear, he thought .it better to take it; that he was not attempting to cross to the south side of the street; he was attempting to drive around the truck, but there was [231]*231not room for him to pass the truck without going on the track. He had followed right behind the truck, probably a block. He did not hear any hell of the car ring. He was not absent-minded when driving, but looked ahead. His fear was caused because the car was going at more than ordinary speed; that, if the car had been going at an ordinary speed, he could have gone across or back safely. “Question: You did not know what was the ordinary or what was the excessive rate of speed at that time, then? Answer: Oh, just catching it with my eye. I knew what was usual and what was unusual.” The motorman commenced stopping the car when he got pretty near. The car did not stop with the wheel on the fender, hut went a little by. The car shoved the buggy out so that it was clear of the car when the car stopped. The buggy was a few inches over five feet wide; the truck was about seven feet wide. From the north rail of the track to the curb on the north side of the street was about twenty-five feet. While he was behind the truck he could look up hut could not he sure as to what was in front. Flis shoulder was dislocated by the accident. There was testimony for respondent, from passengers on the car, tending to show that the car was running at the rate of thirteen or fourteen miles per hour until it reached the Bernard street crossing, except when it slowed up for switches or to pick up passengers, and that at the Bernard street crossing it slowed up to about half that rate, at which last rate the car was moving when the buggy was struck; that the car ran seven or eight feet after it struck the buggy; that the car was a double-trucked, heavy car, twenty-five or thirty feet long. One witness says the car was running “unusually fast” just before the accident occurred. “Question: How came you to be noticing the speed of the car ? Answer: We were going so fast. Q. How, it had slowed down at Di[232]*232vision street, and then started np very rapidly after it crossed, — is that it ? A. Yes. Q. Going faster than the usual and ordinary rate of speed ? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 284, 25 Wash. 225, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traver-v-spokane-street-railway-co-wash-1901.