Whiting v. City of Seattle

258 P. 824, 144 Wash. 668, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 824
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1927
DocketNo. 20644. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 258 P. 824 (Whiting 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
Whiting v. City of Seattle, 258 P. 824, 144 Wash. 668, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 824 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

*669 Holcomb, J.

On January 13, 1926, appellant was operating a street car system, with a cable line on James street operating in an easterly and Westerly direction, intersecting a double-track electric line running north and south on Broadway. At the northeast corner of Broadway and James, the city maintains a building used as a power station and rest room, with a level loading space for passengers in front of the building and immediately north of the James street tracks. The curb is cut away, for about one hundred feet north of the cable line, on the east side of Broadway, thus providing a loading place for northbound cars. At the time of the accident involved here, an electric car, in charge of a motorman only, was standing at the usual stopping place above described, directly north of the James street cable line, taking on passengers at the forward end, with the right front gate open.

Deceased, a woman seventy-six years old, had just • alighted from a James street cable car, had a transfer, and was waiting for the southbound Broadway car, at the usual loading place on the west side of the street. Another elderly lady, Mrs. Sackett, a stranger in the city and unfamiliar with the points of transfer on the car lines, had a transfer for, and was awaiting, a northbound car. She was standing on the west side of the street, not knowing that the northbound cars loaded only on the east side of Broadway. Mrs. Sackett requested the assistance of deceased in locating and boarding her proper car. She did not know that the car then standing on the east side of Broadway, loading passengers on its right front platform, was the car for which she held a transfer. Deceased, attempting to aid Mrs. Sackett to find and board her car, crossed the street easterly, Mrs. Sackett following, and approached the standing car. The gate was open and *670 passengers were-boarding it, and deceased undertook to pass in front of the car. She was a little in advance of Mrs. Sackett, as she started to pass in front of the car, and, just as she stepped over the west rail, the motorman started the car, without looking forward, without any kind of a warning, and while looking at and operating the gate of the platform to his right. Deceased was struck and thrown to the pavement. The motorman stopped his car within a very few feet, and before it ran over deceased. He picked her up, spoke to her, obtained her address, and asked a young man in an automobile who, attracted by the accident, drove up just then, to take deceased to her home. To this the young man assented, and took her in his automobile to her home. He reached her home within fifteen or twenty minutes after the accident.

Deceased suffered an intra-capsular fracture of the head of the left femur, which resulted in her death on February 7, 1926. Prior to her death, on February 1, she filed her claim against appellant in the sum of $25,000 for personal injuries, pain and suffering, and $271.50 for hospital, nurses’ and physicians’ services. After her death, on February 11, 1926, respondent, as executor of her estate, filed another claim. In his claim he asked $404 for hospital, nurses’ and physicians’ services, $350 for funeral expenses, $5,000 for pecuniary loss, and $25,000 for the use and benefit of Edwin P. Whiting and Eoscoe Everett Whiting, the two sons of deceased, as damages for the physical injuries, mental and physical suffering sustained and suffered by deceased.

The trial judge, sitting as the sole trier of the facts, found for respondent and gave judgment in the sum of $425 for medical attention and hospital bills, $350 for funeral expenses, and $4,000 for pain and suffering, *671 but deified recovery for wrongful death, upon the ground that there was no proof of pecuniary loss.

On appeal, much of the argument of appellant revolves about the question of improper joinder of causes of action and insufficient facts alleged to constitute a cause of action.

It is argued that the complaint states three causes of action: 1st. For the injury, pain, suffering and medical expenses incurred by deceased prior to her death, for which she could have recovered had she lived. 2nd. For the wrongful death, for the benefit of the two sons for their alleged pecuniary loss. 3rd. For funeral expenses.

It is contended that the first cause of action is based solely on Rem. Comp. Stat., § 194 [P. C. § 8275]; the second on Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 183 and 183-1 [P. C. §§ 8259, 8260]; and that the third is a common law right of action involving damage to the estate, which cannot be claimed under either § 194 or § 183.

The second cause of action, that for recovery for wrongful death, was eliminated by the court’s finding that there was no proof in support thereof.'

Appellant’s contention is, that two separate actions should have been brought for the injuries sustained by the decedent; one by the executor for wrongful death and for funeral expenses, under §§-183 and 183-1; and another by the children, in their individual capacities, for hospital expenses, doctor bills, and pain and suffering, under § 194; and that the executor cannot, in his representative capacity, recover for pain and suffering under § 194.

We have held, in Swanson v. Pacific Shipping Co., 60 Wash. 87, 110 Pac. 795, a case not cited by either party, that, under § 194, where an action was commenced by the injured party himself for damages for *672 negligence, and afterwards the original plaintiff became insane, upon which his wife and children were substituted as parties plaintiff for their own benefit, and after which the original plaintiff died, upon which a second supplemental complaint was filed and a substitution of the widow and minor children was permitted as parties plaintiff in the action and the cause permitted to be continued and prosecuted in their names, to recover such damages as he could have recovered, had the cause been tried prior to his death, that § 194 was intended to give the wife and children the right of action to recover the damages which the husband and father would have recovered in his action, had he survived.

These various sections, 183, 183-1 and 194 of the statutes, as they have been successively amended by various legislatures, have been before this court for construction a number of times. See: Swanson v. Pacific Shipping Co., supra; Kanton v. Kelly, 65 Wash. 614, 118 Pac. 890; Thompson v. Seattle, Renton & S. R. Co., 71 Wash. 436, 128 Pac. 1070; Mesher v. Osborne, 75 Wash. 439, 134 Pac. 1092, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 917; Brodie v. Washington Water Power Co., 92 Wash. 574, 159 Pac. 791; Whittlesey v. Seattle, 94 Wash. 645, 163 Pac. 193, L. R. A. 1917D 1084; Machek v. Seattle, 118 Wash. 42, 203 Pac. 25; Howe v. Whitman County, 120 Wash. 247, 206 Pac. 968, 212 Pac. 164.

. It is contended, that there is some inconsistency between the holdings of this court in the constructions rendered in the foregoing cases, especially between the constructions in Howe v. Whitman County and Machek v. Seattle, the last two cases above cited.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 824, 144 Wash. 668, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1927.