99 Wash. 368 | Wash. | 1918
This action for personal injuries, alleged to have been caused to respondent Mrs. Redick by the negligent operation of a jitney owned and operated by appellant Oscar L. Peterson, after a trial by the court without a jury, resulted in findings and conclusions and a judgment for $250 in favor of respondents. The questions of the negligence of the jitney driver and the contributory negligence of Mrs.
Mrs. Redick testified in effect that, on reaching the street intersection where the accident occurred, she stopped a second, looked down the street to the west and saw several automobiles in that direction in the middle of the block, looked then across and up the street and, seeing no vehicles to block her passage, without looking again to the west, started across the street upon the regular sidewalk crossing, and when about midway between the curb and the street car tracks and without any notice, warning, or alarm from appellant, coming upon her from the west, was struck and severely and painfully injured. There was testimony that the jitney was running at a speed of from eighteen to twenty miles per hour.
The question then is, is it contributory negligence for a pedestrian, after having looked once in a direction along a street for vehicles that might interfere with safe passage across the street at a regular street crossing and in other necessary directions along the street, to fail to look a second time in the first direction. We think not, as a matter of law. Cases to similar effect have been before us and so decided. Franey v. Seattle Taxicab Co., 80 Wash. 396, 141 Pac. 890; Chase v. Seattle Taxicab & Transfer Co., 78 Wash. 537, 139 Pac. 499; Ludwigs v. Dumas, 72 Wash. 68, 129 Pac. 903; Hillebrant v. Manz, 71 Wash. 250, 128 Pac. 892; Birch v. Abercrombie, 74 Wash. 486, 133 Pac. 1020, 135 Pac. 821, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 59; Tschirley v. Lambert, 70 Wash. 72, 126 Pac. 80; Johnson v. Johnson, 85 Wash. 18, 147 Pac. 649.
The Johnson case, supra, is almost completely parallel with the case before us. A very similar case, also, was that of Hillebrant v. Manz, supra. In those cases, under such circumstances, such precautions having been taken, it was held, as a matter of law, that contributory negligence on the part of the injured person could not be inferred. In such
The finding of the court that the injuries of respondent were caused wholly and solely by the carelessness and negligence of the appellant Peterson without which Mrs. Redick would not have been injured, is a finding negativing contributory negligence, and therefore, in effect, finds upon the question asserted by appellants not to have been passed upon by the trial court.
A contention is made by appellants that the court admitted in evidence improper evidence of damages, namely, a fear of automobiles. There was a trial amendment allowed by the court alleging extreme nervousness as a result of the injury complained of. The evidence of such particular nervousness, ensuing fi;om the shock of her injury by the automobile, was proper evidence going to the question of damages.
The judgment against appellant Selma Peterson was unwarranted, and respondents here confess that no judgment should have been rendered against her. It is asserted, however, that she was included in the judgment only by inadvertence, and the record fails to show any objection on the part of appellants to the form of the judgment or that appellants called attention of respondents or the court to such error. Respondents ask that the name of defendant Selma Peterson be stricken from the judgment, and it is so ordered.
In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
Ellis, C. J., Mount, Chadwick, and Morris, JJ., concur.