90 Wash. 375 | Wash. | 1916
Respondent, a teamster of twenty years experience, was driving an express wagon north on Broad street, in the city of Seattle. He was driving along the east car track, the west track being, at the time, used for cars going both north and south. As he approached Seventh avenue north and when from thirty-five to fifty feet from the crossing, he looked and saw a street car approaching from the south. It was about a block and a half away as he then estimated the distance. A subsequent inspection and estimate fixed the distance at from three hundred to three hundred and ninety feet.
When respondent came to Seventh avenue he turned abruptly across the tracks. His horse had gotten over, but the car. struck the wagon, demolishing it and injuring respondent. Negligence is alleged in that the car was being driven at an excessive rate of speed, and that no bell or warn
Appellant relies upon the defense of contributory negligence. Respondent says:
“A. I saw a car approaching about a block and a half. Q. After you had observed this car coming towards you, you didn’t stop, after you once looked and saw this car approaching, you didn’t at any other time pay any attention to it? A. No, sir, didn’t pay no attention to it. Q. You simply went ahead and attempted to cross these tracks, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you had crossed the right-hand track, that is, the right-hand track as you go from town? A. Yes, sir. Q. You had gotten clear over these tracks? A. Clear over. Q. And across the intervening space between the two tracks and onto the second, that is onto the left-hand track as you come from town? A. Yes, sir. Q. As I believe you testified, your horse had gotten over the last rail of the second track? A. Yes, sir. Q. So that the wagon then was immediately on the track itself? A. Yes, sir. Q. All this time, from the time when you first observed this car, you paid no attention whatever to the car itself? A. No, sir. Q. You weren’t paying any attention so far as the car was concerned? A. No, I thought I was safe as it was. Q. Was there anything in front of your wagon to prevent you from seeing this car ? A. No, sir. Q. What kind of a rig have you ? A. I have got a horse and wagon. Q. Got a top on it? A. No, sir. Q. It didn’t have a top? Q. There was nothing in the way, was there, to obstruct your view of the street car from the time you first saw it until it struck you? A. No, sir, nothing to obstruct me.”
The fact is clear that respondent, after seeing a car approaching on a city street and appreciating that “they run pretty fast . . . like a whirlwind,” and being in a situation that would indicate to the motorman that he intended to pursue a course parallel to the street car, suddenly turned in front of the car without looking and without taking any account for his own safety.- We have held such conduct to be negligence and denied a recovery in the following cases:
The case is on all fours, even to the contention that the car was exceeding the speed limit, with the case of Johnson v. Washington Water Power Co., supra. The rule as there laid down, is:
“By stopping at any time before he reached the railway track, the appellant would have been in a place of safety, and for one in his situation, knowing as he must have known had he looked in the direction of the car that it was almost upon him, to stop before attempting to cross the track would have been the exercise of only ordinary prudence and care. A motorman has the right to assume that a person on the street will exercise such care to avoid injury, and he may lawfully act on that assumption, until the conduct of the person warns him to the contrary.”
Respondent relies principally upon: Richmond v. Tacoma R. & Power Co., 67 Wash. 444, 122 Pac. 351; Morris v. Seattle, Renton & Southern R. Co., 66 Wash. 691, 120 Pac. 534; Gladen v. Seattle, 83 Wash. 412, 145 Pac. 418.
The Richmond case is distinguished in the Beeman case. The Morris case is distinguishable in that the plaintiff there testified that he looked just before turning his horse toward the crossing, and that no car was in sight. He drove slowly onto the track, and then for the first time saw the car approaching so rapidly that he could not clear the crossing in time to avoid the collision. In the Gladen case, we held that one, knowing that another is in a place of danger, is bound to use a degree of care commensurate with the danger in which the one injured had placed himself. In other words, one who sees and appreciates the danger of another must use all reasonable care to protect him. If he does not, he himself
Reversed and remanded with instructions to dismiss.