60 Wash. 162 | Wash. | 1910
The respondents brought this action against the appellant to recover the value of an automobile which was run into and destroyed by a train operated on the
In the complaint the respondents alleged that the Winton Motor Carriage Company had sold the automobile in question to the respondent Hull on a conditional contract of sale, reserving title in itself, and that there was still due on the contract from Hull to the company some $1,100. This allegation was denied by the appellant on information and belief. At the trial the respondent Hull while on the stand was questioned concerning the contract, and answered to the
The appellant argues further, however, that it was entitled to have the written contract exhibited, since it might have shown the contract price, of the machine, which would' have been some evidence of its value. Had it been shown that the writing recited the contract price of the machine, and had the appellant requested its production in order to present it as a part of its own case, it might have been error for the court to have refused to require its production, but it was not error under the circumstances shown here. The demand to produce the writing was not made on the parties, but. of a witness under cross-examination. This was not such
■ In the course of the trial a witness was placed on the Stand and questioned concerning the disposition made of the automobile after the accident, and answered to the eifect that it was disposed of as junk. He was then asked to state the sum received for it. At this point the appellant interrupted the examination and requested permission to ask a question for the purpose of ascertaining the competency of’ the evidence. Permission was granted it, whereupon it elicited from the witness the fact that the junk had been sold in parts to different persons and that regular books of account had been kept showing such sales and the sums received therefor. The appellant thereupon objected to the witness’ testifying to the amount of the sales, contending that the entries in the account books were the best evidence. The objection was overruled, and error is assigned thereon. But manifestly the ruling is without error. A person having knowledge of the sale of a chattel and the amount paid or agreed to be paid for it is a competent witness to the fact, although he may have recorded in his books of account a memorandum of the sale. Indeed, books of account have themselves always been regarded as a species of secondary evidence, admissible in favor of the party keeping them, because of the necessities of the case; not because they were the best evidence of the transactions recorded in them. Green-leaf, Evidence (14th ed.), § 117. The fact that such entries have been made has never been held to preclude the testimony of the person having knowledge of the facts and able to testify to them from memory.
It is next assigned that the court erred in denying to the appellant’s counsel the privilege of arguing his motion for a nonsuit. But the court was not obligated to listen to counsel’s reasons for his motion. If the court felt satisfied that the case made was one that must be submitted to the jury
The court instructed the jury in part as follows:
“If you should find from the evidence that the driver of the automobile might have avoided the accident by adopting some course of action other than that pursued by him, he would not necessarily be guilty of contributory negligence in that respect, provided you find that the driver of the automobile acted as an ordinarily careful and prudent person would have acted under like circumstances and conditions, and you further find that an ordinarily prudent man under the particular circumstances surrounding the said driver at the time, would have been justified in adopting the course pursued by the driver of the automobile. The driver’s conduct in that regard is not necessarily to be judged by the facts as they now appear before you, but the plaintiff is entitled to have the acts and conduct of the said driver considered in the light of the facts as they appeared to him at the time, and if you find that an ordinarily careful and prudent man would have acted as said driver acted with his, the driver’s view of all the circumstances and conditions as they were at that time, you will be justified in finding that he was not guilty of contributory negligence.
“If you find for the plaintiffs you cannot award them a greater amount than they have asked for in their second amended complaint, that is — I believe, gentlemen, you have asked for $2,500, and the estimated value of the junk was :$200 — that would be $2,300 — you could not find for any greater sum than $2,300.”
The first of these follows substantially an instruction approved by this court in Traver v. Spokane Street R. Co., 25 Wash. 225, 65 Pac. 284, and is a correct statement of the law. After an accident happens it is always easy to see many ways by which it could have been avoided, but such considerations do not usually afford a correct test of negligence. A victim of an accident is entitled to have his conduct judged by the circumstances surrounding him at the time of the accident — by the conditions as they appeared to one in his then situation — and if his conduct when so judged
The second instruction was nothing more than a statement to the jury of the maximum amount of damages they would be entitled to find in case they found for the plaintiffs. It was without error.
The appellant requested the court to give the following instruction which was refused:
“The jury are instructed that if they find that the servants, agents or employes of the plaintiffs in charge of said automobile, by any act or omission on their part were guilty of negligence, and that such negligence directly contributed in causing the collision and injuries, if any, then you will .find for the defendant regardless of whether or not it or its servants were also negligent. And in this connection you are instructed that it is the duty of the chauffeur who was in charge of the said automobile, if you find from the evidence that he was in charge thereof, and who was acting as the agent of the plaintiffs in running said automobile, if you find from the evidence that he was so acting, upon approaching said crossing, to have stopped, looked and listened before place in question, and if you find from the evidence that the chauffeur did not stop, look and listen upon approaching said tracks, and that his failure to so stop, look and listen was the proximate cause of the accident, such failure would be negligence of the plaintiffs, and plaintiffs cannot recover herein, and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
This instruction was properly refused as not correctly stating the law applicable to the facts of the case. The respondents’ driver owed no absolute duty to stop before attempting to cross the appellant’s track. If on approaching the track he could ascertain by looking and listening that he could cross in safety, he has complied with the rule. Here the driver testified that he traveled parallel to the appellant’s track for six miles without meeting or being passed by a single car, that on arriving at the track he looked in both directions and listened and neither saw nor heard a
The material part of the other instruction requested was included in the general charge given by the court on its own motion. This satisfies the rule.
The remaining assignments question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. But without following the argument of the appellant’s counsel, we think the evidence justified the court in submitting the case to the jury. On the question of the appellant’s negligence, the evidence most favorable to the respondent — and it is this evidence we must accept as true — tended to show that the track in the direction from which the train approached the automobile was practically straight for a distance of from four hundred to four hundred and fifty feet, and that the automobile while on the track was plainly visible from the train for this entire distance ; that the train consisted of an electric motor and a flat car, the latter being loaded with steel rails, and was in charge of a motorman and a brakeman; that when first seen it was not running at an excessive speed, and could have been stopped, as the motorman himself says, within a distance of from one hundred and sixty to one hundred and seventy feet; that when the car became stranded and the passengers sought to attract the attention of the motorman to its position, the motorman was not at the motor, and did not reach
On the question of contributory negligence, it is insisted that the respondents’ servant was negligent when he failed to' stop his machine before reaching the track after he discovered that the engine had stopped running, and, also, that he was negligent in that he did not call the passengers to his assistance and push the car from the track out of the way of danger. But with reference to the first objection, the driver stated that the distance between the point the engine stopped and the track was too short within which to stop the car, and furthermore, he thought if the engine did not start from the efforts he made to start it by manipulating its controls that the car would roll clear of the track by reason of its own momentum. As to the second objection, he stated that the men of the party all started forward to warn the approaching train of the position of the automobile as soon as the car stopped, and that in any event their conduct was not subject to his control. Under these circumstances it seems clear that the question of negligence was one of fact for the jury, rather than one of law for the court, and this being so, we must abide by their verdict.
The judgment is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Gose, and Mokeis, JJ., concur.