Washington v. City of Seattle

16 P.2d 597, 170 Wash. 371, 86 A.L.R. 113, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 970
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1932
DocketNo. 24045. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 597 (Washington v. City of Seattle) 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
Washington v. City of Seattle, 16 P.2d 597, 170 Wash. 371, 86 A.L.R. 113, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 970 (Wash. 1932).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

— This action is the result of a collision between an automobile bus and a truck, upon the streets of the city of Seattle. Plaintiff was a passenger for hire upon the bus. A trial before the court, sitting with a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.

On November 14, 1930, one of the city’s buses, operated in connection with the city’s railway system, and on which appellant was then a passenger, was traveling west along east Sixty-fifth street, in the city of Seattle. At the same time, a truck, owned and operated by the respondent Claseman, was traveling south along Twelfth avenue N. E. The two streets intersect at right angles. Under a municipal ordinance of the city, a stop sign had been erected on Twelfth avenue N. E., one hundred feet north of east Sixty-fifth street, requiring traffic on" Twelfth avenue N. E. to come to a stop before entering the intersection. Another ordinance made it unlawful to drive a vehicle across any *373 street intersection within the city limits at a rate of speed faster than fifteen miles per hour.

The truck entered the intersection without having stopped at the stop sign, and the two vehicles collided in the southwest quadrant of the intersection, the truck striking the bus on its right side near the front. The appellant, who was holding a child in her lap at the time, was thrown forward against the seat in front of her, and sustained injuries for which this action was brought. There was evidence to the effect that the bus entered the intersection at a rate of speed of from thirty to thirty-five miles per hour; also, that the northeast corner of the intersection was an obstructed one, as defined by our vehicle operation act. Additional facts will be suggested in the course of our opinion.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is to the court’s refusal to sustain her challenge, for cause, to one of the jurors. It appears that, after the appellant had exhausted her peremptory challenges, a lady whose husband was then an employee of the municipal railway system was called to the jury box. When her identity became known, appellant promptly challenged her right to sit upon the jury. The court denied the challenge. Rem. Comp. Stat., § 330, provides that a challenge for implied bias may be taken for the following causes:

“. . . (2) Standing in the relation of . . . master and servant ... to the adverse party; or being ... in the employment, for wages, of the adverse party. . . .”

The juror’s husband was an employee for wages of the city’s municipal railway system. Clearly, he would not have been competent to serve as a juror in the case. McMahon v. Garlisle-Pennell Lbr. Co., 135 Wash. 27, 236 Pac. 797. Under our statute, the earnings of the husband are presumptively community property. Rem. *374 Comp. Stat., § 6892. While the statute gives the husband management and control of the community personal property, yet, as was said in Jones v. Duke, 151 Wash. 108, 275 Pac. 72,

“In a large number of homes, husbands give their wives a considerable portion of their earnings, and the wife, as a rule pays out this money for household expenses, and, if possible, saves some portion thereof. In other homes, the husband pays the bills and cares for the savings.”

In still other homes, it is said, the wife gets all of it. Whatever may have been the situation with respect to the present juror and her husband, the wife had a direct and immediate interest in the compensation received by her husband, and the reasoning that would imply bias on the part of the husband would, in our opinion, affect her to the same extent. The ruling of the court in denying the challenge was, therefore, prejudicial error.

The next assignment of error is upon the court’s refusal to admit certain evidence. Appellant offered to prove that, in February, 1932, which was fifteen months after the accident and just a week prior to the trial, appellant’s daughter, who was with the appellant at the time of the accident, had ridden upon the same bus along the same course, and by prearrangement was, at the time, being followed by two men in another automobile; she offered to prove that the bus was then traveling at the same rate of speed as at the time of the accident, and that, according to the speedometer of the accompanying’ automobile, the bus was then traveling at the rate of thirty-five miles per hour.

Counsel rely upon Amsbary v. Grays Harbor Ry. & Light Co., 78 Wash. 379, 139 Pac. 46, as substantiating her contention that such evidence was admissible. In that case, the experiment was made to determine how *375 far ahead a person conld he seen by the motorman of a street car. The test in that case was based upon circumstances and conditions that substantially reproduced the situation existing at the time of the accident. It was not predicated, as in the present case, upon a supervenient memory of so fluctuating and uncertain an element as the rate of speed of a bus, wholly unaided by a contemporaneous observation of its speedometer.

The case before us presents a range of variant circumstances more nearly like those in the ease of Lasityr v. Olympia, 61 Wash. 651, 112 Pac. 752, where the refusal of the court to admit the evidence was upheld. Matters of this kind rest largely in the discretion of the trial court, reviewable only for abuse of sound judicial discretion. We think that the court did not abuse its discretion in its ruling in the present case.

Appellant’s next assignment of error is upon the court’s refusal to admit in evidence exhibit B, a photograph of the intersection at or near the northwest corner. Its purpose was, of course, to present an ocular representation • of the location. Appellant had suggested that the jury be taken to view the premises; to this, respondents objected. The conditions there prevailing were quite material as bearing upon the permissible rate of speed of the two automobiles. It is not contended that the exhibit was not a fair representation of the general conditions. We are satisfied that the exhibit should have been admitted. Kelly v. Spokane, 83 Wash. 55, 145 Pac. 57.

Appellant next assigns as error a ruling of the court which excluded evidence of neuritis and of a chipped bone of her shoulder as elements of her damages. Physicians testified as to both of those conditions, but, on motion of the respondents, the evidence was stricken; this was on the theory that those mat *376 ters had not been specifically set forth in the claim or pleaded in the complaint. The claim and complaint each refer to the injuries to the shoulder as consisting of a dislocation. So far as the claim was concerned, we think that the allegation was sufficient, inasmuch as claims of this nature are to be liberally construed, and will support allegations of a more specific designation in the complaint.

So far as the complaint was concerned, we think that the injury alleged was so specific as to indicate to the adverse parties what was to be relied upon at the trial, and, at least, would not suggest to them that a fracture would be claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 597, 170 Wash. 371, 86 A.L.R. 113, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1932.