Wiseman v. Skagit County Dairymen's Assn.

6 P.2d 369, 166 Wash. 57, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1165
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1931
DocketNo. 23430. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 369 (Wiseman v. Skagit County Dairymen's Assn.) 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
Wiseman v. Skagit County Dairymen's Assn., 6 P.2d 369, 166 Wash. 57, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1165 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

This action for damages for personal injuries, resulting from a collision between an automobile and a truck, resulted in a verdict by a jury in favor of respondent for $10,335.85, for which, after denying a new trial, the trial court entered judgment.

The negligence alleged by respondent to have been committed by appellant Shular, the agent, servant and employee of appellant Dairymen’s Association, consisted of driving the truck of appellant at a high, dangerous and unlawful rate of speed and over forty miles per hour; that the truck was driven and operated on the wrong side of the highway and upon that portion of the highway to which respondent was entitled; that the driver of the truck, at the time and place of the collision, was driving and operating it without looking where he was going; that the truck was being driven and operated by Shular in such a manner as to unnecessarily endanger the lives and property of other users of the highway, and particularly respondent; *59 that, when the automobile of respondent and the truck of appellant, driven by Shular, had reached the point where the truck and automobile should have passed, appellant Shular negligently, carelessly, unlawfully and in utter disregard of the rights of respondent, drove and operated it in such a manner that the left side of the truck was over and upon the wrong side of the highway and upon the side of the road to which respondent was entitled, in such a manner that the truck collided with the left side of respondent’s automobile.

Appellants answered with denials, and with affirmative allegations of contributory negligence in that, among other things, respondent was intoxicated and drove his automobile at a high and dangerous rate of speed and partly upon the wrong side of the highway at the time and place in controversy; that whatever damage or injuries respondent received, were due to his own carelessness, negligence and want of care. The affirmative allegations of the answer were denied by reply.

The collision occurred between 3:30 and 4:30 o’clock in the afternoon on September 15, 1929. Respondent, a young man twenty-five years of age, accompanied by one Theodore Buchanan, a boy nineteen years old at the time of the trial, was driving a Ford roadster in a westerly direction on the public highway extending from Rockport to Concrete. Appellant Shular, an employee of appellant Dairymen’s Association, was driving a milk truck belonging to the association in an easterly direction. While rounding a curve, described by witnesses as about a quarter of a square turn, there was a collision between the left side of the Ford roadster and the left side of the truck, resulting in the left arm of respondent being severed above the elbow. At the point of the collision, the highway was fourteen to *60 sixteen feet wide, the surface was composed of grável and was rough and full of chuck holes.

Eespondent testified that, as he approached the curve in the highway, he was driving about thirty or thirty-five miles per hour. He saw appellant’s truck when it was approaching the curve from the opposite direction, at which time the two vehicles were about one hundred or one hundred fifty feet apart. Eespondent took his foot off the accelerator, and at the time of the collision was probably going twenty-five or thirty miles per hour. When he first saw appellant’s truck, Shular was driving in the center of the highway at a speed of forty miles per hour and not watching the road. Shular appeared not to see him until the vehicles were within thirty or forty feet of each other, at which time Shular turned to the right. This swung the rear end of the truck in front of respondent, who was unable to turn further to his right because of logs which lay on the shoulder close to the highway. The center of the body of the milk can rack, which extended from the driver’s seat to the rear of the truck, struck the side of the Ford. The first brace on the body of the truck caught his left arm, which threw it into the next brace and severed the arm above the elbow. The testimony of respondent was corroborated by the Buchanan boy.

Buchanan admitted at the trial that he signed a written statement on September 18, 1929, prepared by an attorney of Seattle, which was signed by Buchanan in the presence of the attorney and appellant Shular. In that statement, among other things, he stated that, when the Ford hit the truck, he believed the truck was stopped, or just about stopped; and that, when the crash occurred, the truck was on the south side of the highway with its right wheels about one or one and a half feet off the road; that the road at that point is *61 about twenty feet wide, filled with chuck holes and very rocky; that, when the Ford struck the truck, it was well over on the left side of the road.

He also admitted that, on September 21, 1930, he signed another statement in the presence of other attorneys and appellant Shular, in which, among other things, he said that the truck at the time of the collision was on the extreme right side of the highway going in an easterly direction, was traveling at a very slow speed on the right side of the road and, in fact, almost stopped; that the Ford was not on its right side of the road, but was on the left of the center of the road when it hit the truck; that the driver of the truck, appellant Shular, was not at fault or to blame for the collision; that the Ford driver was to blame for the collision and was solely negligent.

Buchanan testified that those statements were untrue ; that he did not read the statement signed by him on September 18, and that he was not telling the truth in the statement given to one of the attorneys on September 21. As to this, the credibility of Buchanan was for the jury to determine. His testimony in the record is very clear, positive and straightforward.

Inasmuch as the evidence on behalf of respondent was substantial and positive that the fault was that of appellant’s driver, Shular, while Shular’s evidence was directly to the contrary, the conflict in the evidence was for the jury to determine.

Therefore, we find no merit in the contention of appellants that the trial court should have granted a new trial because the verdict was contrary to the evidence.

It is next argued in the briefs by appellants, rather inconsecutively, that the trial court erred in giving instructions 17, 2, 3, 7, 10, 12 and 8, and in refusing to give appellants’ requested instruction 8.

*62 We shall first discuss the correctness of instruction 17, which reads:

“The court instructs you that, even though you should find from a fair preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff was driving his automobile around a curve at the point of the collision at a speed in excess of that allowed by law, but that the plaintiff was upon his own proper side of the road and the defendant at said time and place was not upon his own proper side of the road, but was upon that portion of the highway to which the plaintiff was entitled, the excessive speed of the plaintiff would not be the proximate cause of the collision and your verdict in such case should be for the plaintiff, regardless of the speed at which he was driving. ’ ’'

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 369, 166 Wash. 57, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiseman-v-skagit-county-dairymens-assn-wash-1931.