55 Wash. 90 | Wash. | 1909
The appellant, driving an automobile, and the respondent, driving a horse hitched to a buggy, collided near the junction of Rainier avenue and Charleston street,
The evidence shows that the collision occurred on the evening of December 3, 1907, shortly after it became dark. The appellant approached the junction of the avenues in her automobile, traveling on Rainier avenue at a speed of about ten miles per hour; while the respondent approached the junction from Charleston street, traveling at the gait at which a carriage horse ordinarily trots. The appellant reached the junction first, and, without slackening the speed of the automobile, started to turn into Charleston street and collided with the respondent before the automobile had completed the turn.
' The parties do not agree as to the exact place in the street the collision took place. The appellant contends, and her evidence in part at least tended to support her, that the automobile turned immediately on reaching the intersection of the street, keeping all the while on the right side of the center of the street, and that the machine was well to the right of the center when the collision occurred. On the other hand, the respondent insists that the appellant, on approaching the corner, was traveling at too great a speed to make the turn directly, and crossed to the left of the center of the street before completing the turn, colliding with respondent’s horse and buggy on that side of the street. The point is material on the question of contributory negligence on the part of the respondent, for if it be true that the appellant was negligent, that she approached the junction of the street and attempted to make the turn at too great a speed under
When the automobile approached the crossing it was traveling, according to the chauffeur, some five feet distant from the curb. It struck the respondent’s horse on the left hip and the buggy on the left front wheel, and this after the automobile had proceeded along Charleston street some fifteen feet and before it had turned straight with the street. These circumstances support the respondent’s account of the accident, rather than the account of appellant; for if the horse and buggy had been approaching on the appellant’s side of the street the collision could hardly have taken place in the manner here described; and that it did take place in this manner there is no dispute in the evidence.
The appellant further contends that the court erred in overruling her motion for a new trial. This motion was based on the ground of newly discovered evidence. But a perusal of the affidavits filed in support of the motion makes it clear that the evidence thought to be newly discovered was not unknown to the appellant at the time of the trial; or, at least, it was not so far hidden that it could not have been found by the exercise of reasonable diligence. This, indeed, is hardly denied by the appellant, but she contends that she did not anticipate the turn the action would take and the necessity for the evidence that she now seeks to produce, and
The judgment is affirmed.