89 Wash. 681 | Wash. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the respondent and against the appellants on a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, in an action to recover for personal injuries suffered by the appellant Eugenie Ottevaere.
The record discloses that the appellants are the owners of certain real property situated in the city of Spokane, consisting of a lot with a dwelling house thereon. The premises are supplied with water from the city water system, the supply pipes entering the house in the basement near the floor. Some time in April, 1914, the appellants petitioned the city to install a water meter on the supply pipe, and the city did so, placing the meter inside of the basement of the house. The meter was installed in the usual manner with a stop and waste valve between the meter and the source of
On October 7, 1914, the meter suddenly gave way, permitting the water flowing through the service pipe to escape into the basement. The appellant Eugenie Ottevaere, discovering the break, went into the basement and sought to stop the flow of the water by turning the stop and waste valve. The place surrounding the meter was dry when she reached it, but soon thereafter the water covered the floor, making it, as she testified, very slippery. The valve fit close and failed to turn with ordinary pressure. The appellant thereupon exerted her full strength upon it, and while so doing, her feet slipped on the wet floor, causing her to fall upon the concrete box. This action was instituted to recover for the injuries suffered from the fall.
In their complaint, the appellants charged the city with negligence in the installation of both the meter and the stop and waste valve. It is alleged that the meter was defective in construction and insufficient, because thereof, to stand the strain caused by the pressure of the water; and that the stop and waste valve was defective in that it was fitted too closely, preventing it from being turned with an ordinary amount of strain upon the handle. But without specially reviewing the record, we think it can be questioned whether there was any substantial evidence tending to support either of these contentions. The court, however, sustained the challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence on the ground that the negligence charged was not the proximate cause of the injury; and, as we have reached the conclusion that the judgment must be sustained on this ground, we will notice only the question suggested by the ruling.
“The argument is not sound which seeks to trace this immediate cause of the death through the previous stages of*684 mental aberration, physical suffering, and eight months’ disease and medical, treatment to the original accident on the railroad. Such a course of possible or even logical argument would lead back to that ‘great first cause least understood,’ in which the train of all causation ends.”'
It is our conclusion that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Morris, C. J., Mount, Chadwick, and Ellis, JJ., concur.