127 Wash. 406 | Wash. | 1923
This is an action brought by the appellant, Sliter, against the respondents Clark, to recover for personal injuries. On the trial, at the conclusion of the appellant’s case, the respondents moved the court to discharge the jury and enter a judgment of nonsuit on the ground that the evidence on the part of the appellant failed to sustain his cause of action. The court granted the motion, entering a judgment of dismissal.
The evidence disclosed that the paved highway was straight for a considerable distance on each side of the place where the accident occurred; that both the paved highway and the intersecting highway on which the respondents approached were in the open, with nothing to obstruct the view of either of the parties, and that the appellant did see the respondents’ approaching car for some distance before it reached the pavement. The appellant testified, however, that the respondents gave no signal indicating what their intention was on reaching the highway; that is, whether they intended to turn to the right, turn to the left, or proceed directly across it.
But aside from this, we think that, were there no statute on the subject, the question whether the respondents were guilty of negligence would have been for the jury. In such a case, their conduct would have
But the trial court seems to have rested its conclusions in part, at least, on what it conceived to be the contributory negligence of the appellant. In passing upon the motion to dismiss, it used this language:
“I was impressed with the young man’s statement on the stand as to its truthfulness and at the time when he made the statement that he, noting this situation, continued at exactly the same rate of speed. I then reached the conclusion that he was necessarily negligent, because there was another car in sight which he saw and he did not change his speed in any way and I feel as a matter of law the court would have to hold that was negligence; . . . I am also considering that Sliter had the right of way, but certainly the situation was such that he should have reduced his speed, and be prepared to meet any emergency that might happen there. It is easy enough to say after an accident that which a man ought to do, but I was impressed with the statement of the other parties coming the other way of what they did — observing Clark’s car approaching, they slackened their speed and of course got by without any trouble. . . . The court is in fact holding that while Sliter was going at a lawful rate of speed that there was no absolute right to that speed when the situation is such that it would require a reduction of speed. It seems to me the case turns on that very fact, which impressed me as the evidence came out, that he at no time changed his rate of speed when he clearly saw Clark approaching there.”
In so holding, we think the court mistook the applicable principles of law governing in such cases. As we have shown, it is the statutory duty of a driver of a motor vehicle when approaching a road intersection
The court’s reference to the other approaching car is hardly appropos. This approaching car was traveling in a direction opposite to that of the appellant. It was thus upon the left of the respondents, and, under the terms of the law, its driver was obligated to look out for and give them the right of way. The driver of that car did what the rules of the road required him to do, and his conduct cannot he a guide to measure the duty of the appellant, whose situation did not require him to, give the right of way to the respondents.
The respondents contend that the motion for non-suit was properly granted because the physical facts as testified to by the appellant show that the accident could not have happened in the way described by him. This contention is based on the estimates made by the appellant of the distances between the relative sitúa-
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.