Webber v. Park Auto Transportation Co.

244 P. 718, 138 Wash. 325, 47 A.L.R. 590, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1043
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1926
DocketNo. 19676. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 244 P. 718 (Webber v. Park Auto Transportation 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
Webber v. Park Auto Transportation Co., 244 P. 718, 138 Wash. 325, 47 A.L.R. 590, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1043 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

This is an action sounding in damages, brought by the respondents Webber, against the appellants, Park Auto Transportation Company and U. S. Inter-Insurance Association, for injuries to their persons and to their property. The action was tried by the lower court, sitting with a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the respondents.

The appellant, Park Auto Transportation Company, owns and operates an automobile stage line between the city of Everett and the city of Seattle, operating its stages over a public road commonly known as the Pacific highway. The general course of the highway *327 named is north and south. At a place on the highway known as Lake Forest Park, a public road leaves the highway, extending in a westerly direction. On December 25, 1923, a stage of the appellant was driven southerly on the Pacific highway and reached the road leading westerly at about 9:30 o’clock in the evening. The respondents, driving their own automobile northerly on the highway, reached the same place shortly before the stage reached it and turned westerly in front of the approaching stage, intending to enter the road. At the speed the stage was approaching, they did not have sufficient time to get into the clear, and a collision, with the consequent injuries which give rise to the present action, was the result.

The appellants first contend that the evidence is insufficient to- sustain the verdict'the jury returned, and to the argument of the contention a large part of their brief is devoted. But we think we need not follow the argument at length. As we read the record, there was testimony on the part of the respondents, to which the jury were entitled to give credence, tending to show that the respondents reached the intersecting road sufficiently in advance of the stage to have turned into the road and leave a clear passage way for the stage, had the driver of the stage been driving it at the time within the speed limit permitted by the statute. It is true that the statutory speed limit was at that place thirty miles per hour, and true that there was evidence tending to show that the rules of. the transportation company required its stages to be driven at this place at a speed not in excess of twenty-five •miles per hour, and evidence that the stage was driven within the speed limit fixed by the company. It is true also that the record discloses-circumstances which tend somewhat strongly .to show-that the respondénts- were *328 guilty of contributory negligence. But tbe evidence was at best conflicting, making tbe question one for tbe jury to determine. This court cannot say tbat the verdict of tbe jury was without substantial evidence in its support, and it is only when it so appears tbat tbe appellate court is permitted to set aside tbe verdict and direct a judgment for tbe other side.

Of tbe errors assigned wbicb are thought to require a new trial, tbe first appears in tbe examination of tbe prospective jurors on their voir direK It is claimed tbat tbe respondents were allowed to inquire into matters touching the qualifications of the several jurors to sit on the trial of tbe cause, not pertinent to such an inquiry, but wbicb bad a tendency to prejudice tbe jurors against tbe appellants. But, while the contentions in this regard would merit discussion, we do not find tbat they are before us. Tbe record, as it is presented here, does not disclose tbat objection was made in tbe court below to tbe examinations. They were not of such gross impropriety as to require tbe trial court to interfere on its own initiative, and, without invoking its ruling, tbe appellants cannot complain in this court.

On the examination of tbe driver of tbe stage as a witness for the appellants, tbe record discloses tbe following:

“Q. As Mr. Webber approached you, did you see him put out his band? A. Hold out bis band to.indicate be was going to turn? Q. Yes. A. No, sir; 'jl could not see back of bis headlights; nobody can.
“Mr. Smith: I ask tbat all his answer be stricken, except tbat he could not see it, or did not see it, rather.
“The Court: Tbe last two statements may be stricken and the jury will disregard them.
“Mr. Falknor: I except to that being stricken, because tbat is testimony that is competent and material.
“Mr. Smith: I submit it is argumentative.
*329 “The Court: It is argumentative. The witness is confined to what he saw or heard.
“Mr. Falknor: All right, you may cross-examine.
“Mr. Smith: No questions.”

The appellants complain, we think justly, of the ruling of the court. A witness is ordinarily permitted to explain his answers, where the question calls for an answer either “yes” or “no,” and in this instance explanation was peculiarly pertinent. There are conditions under which a driver of an automobile on a highway can see the signals given by a driver of an approaching automobile, but there are others in which he cannot. Without some explanation, the jury might infer that the witness’ failure to see the signal was due to inattention or neglect, rather than to inability to see. To meet this condition it was proper to show that a signal could not be seen under the existing conditions. If it be said that the question put to the witness did not call for an explanatory answer, and that the witness’ statement went beyond the purport of the question and was thus voluntary, the answer is that the objection was not based on this ground, nor was it the ground upon which the court struck the answer. The court ruled that the matter of the answer was inadmissible. Doubtless, had it ruled that the answer was beyond the purport of the question, counsel would have interrogated the witness further, but the ground of the objection and ruling foreclosed further inquiry. The remark of the judge in passing on the objection was unfortunate in another respect. He said the witness was “confined to what he saw or heard,” whereas the rule is that he may testify that he did not see, or did not hear.

The appellants requested that the court give to the jury the following instruction:

*330 “I instruct you that it was necessary for the plaintiffs to drive their automobile in a careful and prudent manner, and if they saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have seen, the approach of the defendants ’ stage, then it was their duty not to drive their automo-mile across the path of such stage so near the same as to make a collision probable or unavoidable, and this is true irrespective of who had the right of way, and, if they failed to so drive their automobile, they .cannot recover.”

The court refused to give the instruction, we think erroneously. The instruction was pertinent to the appellants’ theory of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 718, 138 Wash. 325, 47 A.L.R. 590, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-park-auto-transportation-co-wash-1926.