Lead Opinion
On September 17, 1907, the respondent left the place where she was temporarily employed, to go to her home on the comer of Pine street and Bellevue avenue, Seattle. She walked west on the north side of Pine street, until she came to Bellevue avenue. When she reached the east side of Bellevue avenue, she saw two cars, one headed east and the
At the time she reached the crossing, it was dark, about 7: 30 p. m., and after seeing the situation of the two cars on the west side of the crossing, she says she started across and when, using her own language, “a little out from the crossing,” she looked east on Pine and seeing no car, went on. She had one foot over the first rail, when she saw a car approaching from the east. She says she only had time to withdraw her foot when the car struck her upon her left shoulder, throwing her to the sidewalk and inflicting the injuries complained of. In fixing the time she looked east with reference to the time she started to cross, she says “it was just a short time before I crossed;” “I know it was before but I cannot tell how long;” “I could not say any time; it was just a moment before I went over.” Another answer was, “I can say it was better than a moment before.”
The negligence complained of was failure to ring the bell, and she testified that no bell was rung. The testimony of other witnesses upon this point was given by two passengers on the car and the motorman. One passenger, Jones, testified : “I couldn’t say that it did ring or that it didn’t ring.” The other passenger, Pickford, says the bell was rung three or four times between Summit (one block east) and Bellevue, and that the bell was rung within a car length of the crossing. The motorman testified that he rang the bell three or four times between Summit and Bellevue, and once or twice just before striking respondent. He also testified he did not see the respondent until she stepped out from the shade of a tree and stepped onto the track. This tree was shown to be set about twelve feet east from the crossing, and its foliage was from fifteen to eighteen feet in diameter. It
Respondent had lived on the southwest corner of this crossing for about eight months, and was familiar with the fact that a number of different car lines ran over these tracks, and that cars passed there frequently in both directions. She approached this crossing, then, well knowing the situation, and she was bound to use such a degree of care as an ordinary, prudent person having such knowledge of the situation would use under like circumstances. If she had done so, the conclusion is irresistible she would not have been injured.. She says she looked a moment before she started across, but saw nothing and heard nothing; yet it is shown by an engineer familiar with the crossing that, taking the speed of the car at ten miles an hour, her speed at two and one-half miles an hour, and the distance from the place where she said she looked east to the track at ten feet, the car was then forty-two feet east of the crossing.
We cannot understand how one looking for a car can fail to see a lighted car with its headlight throwing on the track ahead of it, and only forty-two feet away. The physical facts of the situation áre a unit in showing respondent could not have us,ed ordinary care in attempting the crossing. If she looked she must have seen the car, or else she gave such an indifferent and casual glance as was of no value to her in
It is urged by respondent that, if it should appear that she attempted the crossing without looking and without listening, such failure is not contributory negligence in law; citing Roberts v. Spokane St. R. Co., 23 Wash. 325, 63 Pac. 506, 54 L. R. A. 184, and other cases from this court in which it is held that failure to look and listen before crossing the tracks of an electric railway in a public street where the cars have not the exclusive right of way, is not negligence per se. Such is undoubtedly the rule here, but such a rule does not meto that one can heedlessly and carelessly cross the track without using his senses for his protection; nor does it mean that those who have eyes to see but see not and ears to hear but hear not, are exercising due care. In determining the question of contributory negligence, due care or ordinary prudence is the only known test. What would be due care under certain circumstances would not be due care under other and different circumstances; and in determining this question this court has refused to predicate its answer alone upon the fact that it did not appear that the person about to cross the track looked or listened, and say such failure of itself alone constitutes negligence in law. Other facts existing and present and affecting the situation
In Hall v. West End St. R. Co., 168 Mass. 461, 47 N. E. 124, the holding is, to cross a street railway track “in such a state of inattention as to know nothing of the approach of a car until struck shows want of ordinary care.” In Kelley v. Wakefield & S. St. R. Co., 175 Mass. 331, 56 N. E. 285, it is
“Whether a pedestrian is guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen before attempting to cross the track of a street railway is, as a general rule, a question of fact for the jury, to be determined from all the circumstances of the particular case; but the circumstances may be such, and the evidence as to those circumstances so conclusive, that the court should say, as a question of law, that he was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen;” citing, Hickey v. St. Paul City R. Co., 60 Minn. 119, 61 N. W. 893, where it was held, as a question of law, that the plaintiff therein was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen before crossing the street railway track.
In Russell v. Minneapolis St. R. Co., 83 Minn. 304, 86 N. W. 346, the court thus states the rule:
“It is not, as a matter of law, negligence for a pedestrian to cross a street railway track (at least, within the populous part of the city) without looking and listening for an approaching car. Whether the failure to look and listen be an act of negligence must be determined from all the circumstances of each particular case, guided by the rule of ordinary care and prudence. If a person by the exercise of such care could have discovered an approaching car and avoided the accident and he failed to do so, he cannot recover. So the question in every case is one of ordinary care. Failure to look and listen might be conclusive, or at least very strong, evidence of negligence in one case, and in another of no particular controlling force at all.”
Referring to the facts in the case before it, the court continues :
“A glance of the eye to the left would have informed her of the approach of the car, but she says she neither heard nor saw it. Clearly, from her undisputed evidence, reasonable minds can arrive at but one conclusion, and that to the
Such language might well be written upon, a review of the facts in the case before us.
The latest kindred expression from this court may be found in Keefe v. Seattle Elec. Co., 55 Wash. 448, 104 Pac. 774, wherein it is said:
“The facts speak the law in each case, and it does not follow from what we have said that a person has a right to go blindly upon a track when a car is so near that his attempt must necessarily result in a scramble for the right of way.”
Cases might be multiplied holding a like rule. We have, however, confined our citations to those states following which this court first pronounced the rule in the Roberts case, and our purpose in doing so is to make clear that this rule in the Roberts case does not announce a rule of conduct that may be used as a measuring stick in all cases irrespective of the facts, which must alone determine its proper announcement.
In the present case, it conclusively appears to us that, if the respondent looked as she says she did, she must have seen the car then only forty-two feet away. If she did not look, under all the attendant circumstances, she was not using due and ordinary care. In either case she was guilty of contributory negligence, and she cannot recover.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for dismissal.
Rudkin, C. J., and Chadwick, J., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) — There is a photograph in the record, the accuracy of which is not disputed, which shows that the car which struck the respondent could be plainly seen from the place where the accident occurred, for a distance of about five hundred feet. There must of necessity be reciprocal duties upon the pedestrian and the street railway company. The track itself is a danger signal, and the pedestrian cannot be absolved from using the care which ordinary pru
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — Whether the street car bell was rung by the motorman just prior to the time the car struck the respondent, and whether the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence, were disputed questions of fact, on which, in my opinion, there was evidence sufficient to support a verdict for either party. The questions, therefore, were for the jury, and this court should abide by thé jury’s determination thereof.