This is an action for damages arising out of a collision between two automobiles. The verdict was for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals.
The facts of the accident are reported in
Raz v. Mills,
The plaintiff contends that Mrs. Mills was negligent as a matter of law in permitting her automobile to cross over the center line into the lane occupied by the plaintiff’s automobile. We held in the first case that the total factual situation, including an alleged emergency caused by a jay-walking pedestrian, and the defendant’s reaction thereto, had to be considered by the jury. We adhere to that view.
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Error is assigned to the giving of an instruction upon the defendant’s theory that the accident was unavoidable. As we have observed before, the instruction is not one that should be given in the ordinary case.
Locatelli v. Ramsey,
The final assignment of error contends that the trial court should have directed a verdict for the plaintiff because the judgment in the first case was conclusive on the question of the defendant’s liability. We have found no authority to support the proposition that a plaintiff in an action for damages for his own injuries can treat as
res judicata
a finding in favor of some other plaintiff against the same defendant. In such cases, the stranger to the first action is not bound by the judgment therein. Therefore, because of the want of mutuality, neither can he claim the benefit thereof. See
Owens v. Kuro,
56 Wash2d 564,
Neither can the related concept of collateral estoppel apply to the case at bar. In
Wolff v. Du Puis,
The cause was submitted upon instructions which, when taken as a whole, presented impartially the plaintiff’s and defendant’s theories of the case. The jury reached a verdict different from that reached by another jury considering the same accident. In the first case we held that a jury question was presented because reasonable minds might differ upon the question of negligence. Apparently reasonable minds have differed. There was no error of law.
Affirmed.
