83 Wash. 412 | Wash. | 1915
A crew of city employees was engaged in removing a line of wire on Alki avenue, near its intersection
Although several questions are raised in the briefs, all were waived at the time of argument except the one of contributory negligence on the part of defendant.
In determining the question of contributory negligence, the first duty of the court is to ascertain the proximate cause of the injury, to disassociate the proximate from the supervening and intervening causes and ascertain from the whole
“When a plaintiff by his own negligence has placed himself in a dangerous position where injury is likely to result, the defendant with knowledge of the plaintiff’s danger is bound to use reasonable care to avoid injuring plaintiff; and where, by the exercise of such care, defendant could avoid the injury but fails to do so, the defendant’s negligence becomes the proximate cause of the injury and renders him liable.”
In the latter case:
“This court has held, in accordance with many courts and with what we conceive to be the more logical as well as the more humane rule, that where the peril of a traveler on the highway is actually discovered and should be appreciated by the operator of a street car, or other agency of danger, there arises a new duty to exercise all reasonable care to avoid injury, and the failure to exercise such care, if it results in injury, will render a defendant liable notwithstanding the continuance of the plaintiff’s negligence up to the instant of the injury.”
Granting that plaintiff was negligent in passing over the wire at the time and at the place he did, it is clear that the employees of the city, knowing of his presence, were put to a higher duty than first imposed and it was incumbent upon them to use a degree of care commensurate with the added danger in which plaintiff had placed himself. Whether the employees of the city used such reasonable care knowing plaintiff’s peril, was for the jury. The question has been decided in his favor, and against the city.
Affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Gose, Parker, and Morris, JJ., concur.