No. 6010 | Wash. | Feb 23, 1906

Rudkin, J.

On the evening of December 15, 1904, the plaintiff became a passenger on one of the defendant’s First avenue cars, in the city of Seattle, with a view of reaching his home on Virginia street. First avenue and Virginia street intersect at right angles. Immediately south of the south line of Virginia street there is a switch on the First avenue line where the cars turn from First avenue into Virginia street. The outgoing cars on the First avenue line stop at this switch, but do not, as a rule, stop on the north side of *659Virginia street. The incoming ears, on the other hand, stop at the north side of Virginia street, hut do not on the south. In other words, the general rule that oars stop om the far side of intersecting streets is here reversed. Up to this point there is no conflict in the testimony, except as to the custom of stopping outgoing cars on the north- side of Virginia street.

The plaintiff testified that he got off the oar at that point a number of times, while the employees of the defendant testified that the cars rarely stopped there. The plaintiff further testified that he was riding on the back platform of the car, -talking to a friend and waiting for the conductor to call out Virginia street. The car stopped at the switch at the south side of Virginia street and, as the car started np, the plaintiff touched the- conductor on the elbow, inquired if that was Virginia street, and informed him that he desired to get off there. The conductor replied that the car. would not stop again until it reached Lenora street, which is the next street beyond Virginia. The plaintiff protested against this, and said: “Lenora nothing; I get off here.” The conductor thereupon gave one bell, which is the usual signal to stop the car, and the plaintiff made his way across the platform and took a position on- the lower step of the car, with his left hand on the stanchion, so as to be ready to alight when the car reached the north side of Virginia street. At the time the signal to stop was given, the car was moving slowly into Virginia Streep and by the time the plaintiff reached the lower step the car was about the middle of the street. Instead of stopping at the north side of Virginia street, the car increased its speed so that by the time it reached that point, or very soon thereafter, it was going at the rate of eight or ten miles an hour. The plaintiff in some maimer slipped or was thrown from the car receiving the injury complained of. The plaintiff was corroborated, in a measure, by the person with whom he was conversing just before leaving the car.

*660The defendant, on the other hand, called the conductor, the motorman, and several passengers who were on the ear at the time, all of whom testified that the signal to> stop the car was not given until the car had passed beyond the north side of Virginia street, a.nd some of whom testified that the plaintiff voluntarily stepped or jumped from the car. At the elosd of all the testimony the court discharged the jury and directed a judgment for the defendant. Trom this judgment the plaintiff appeals.

In determining whether the court erred in withdrawing the ease from the jury we must accept the appellant’s theory of the ease, in so far as there is testimony to sustain it. We must assume that the conductor signalled the motorman tor stop the ear just as it was entering Virginia street, at a slow rate of speed; that the appellant made his way across the platform and took his position on the lower step of the car, with his hand on the stanchion so as to be ready to alight when the car came to a stop in obedience to the signal; that instead of stopping, the motorman increased the speed of the car so that it had attained a speed of from eight to' ten miles an hour at, or soon after, reaching the the north side of Virginia street; and that the' appellant was hurled or thrown from the car without fault on his part.

Was there no evidence of negligence here, as a matter of law, or was this an exercise of the highest degree of care consistent with the practical operation of a street railway? A person who’ voluntarily rides on the steps of a "street car assumes 'the ordinary risk incident to his position, and if injured through the ordinary jerking or jolting of the ear, he cannot recover; but the appellant was not riding on, the car step voluntarily, nor was he guilty of negligence, as a matter of law, in making his way to the step after the signal to stop was given. We may take judicial notice of the fact that this is a common practice in all street car traffic. The appellant assumed the risk arising from the ordinary jerking or jolting of the car in reaching the stopping place, hut he did *661not assume any risk arising from the negligence of the respondent or its servants.

The negligence on the part of the respondent consisted in this: the servants in charge of the car led the appellant into a place of more or less danger and threw him off his guard. In other words, the appellant had a right to presume that the car would come to a stop at the north side of Virginia street, and to act upon that presumption. The jury -might infer ■from this testimony that the failure to stop the car in obedience to the signal was the direct and proximate cause of the appellant’s injury. It cannot he said, as a matter of law, that the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence. Indeed the respondent does not so contend. It cannot he said that the appellant assumed the extra hazard arising from the failure, of the respondent to stop the car, as it was in duly hound to do, nor in our opinion can it he said, as a matter of law, that the respondent was entirely free from negligence which contributed approximately to the injury. As above stated, we have thus far assumed that the appellant’s testimony is true. Of course, if the signal to stop the car was not given until after the car passed beyond Virginia street, or if the appellant voluntarily stepped or jumped from the car, or was otherwise guilty of contributory negligence, he cannot recover.

The respondent further contends that the preponderance of the testimony was so strongly in its favor that it would have been the duty of the court to set aside a verdict in favor of the appellant, had one been found or returned, and that the court was therefore justified in directing a judgment in the first instance. Judging from the number of witnesses alone, and that is practically the only guide we have, it will readily he conceded that a preponderance of the testimony was with the respondent, hut that alone would not justify the action, of the trial court. Doubtless, in some jurisdictions the rule prevails that if the court would set aside a verdict in favor of one of the parties as against the evidence, it may *662direct a verdict or judgment in favor of the adverse party, bnt that rule does not obtain in this state. We have uniformly held that the granting of a new trial rests in the discretion of the trial court, and if we concede to the trial courts the same power or discretion in directing judgments, the right of trial by jury will be practically abrogated. The power of a superior court to direct a judgment is practically commensurate with: its plower to direct a nonsuit. The only substantial difference between the two judgments is, that the former is res adjudicate, while the latter is not, unless based upon some affirmative finding. Oases may arise in which a plaintiff’s prima facie case is so fully explained and controverted as to leave no substantial conflict in the testimony, but ordinarily testimony which is sufficient to carry a ease beyond a nonsuit will carry it to the jury at the close of the testimony. In construing the statute under which the court directed the judgment appealed from, in Spokane etc. Lumber Co. v. Loy, 21 Wash. 501, 58 Pac. 672, 60 Pac. 1119, the court said:

“We do not think it was the intention of the legislature in enacting this statute to empower the superior courts of the state to- determine matters of fact such as are usually determined by a jury, but simply to authorize the taking of a case from the jury when the facts are so clearly established that the court can see, as a matter of law, what the verdict and decision should be. In other words, where the court would not have been warranted under the prior statute in granting a nonsuit, it would not, we think, be justified under this statute, in taking the case from the jury and directing a judgment to be entered.”

We think that under the testimony the court should have submitted the case to the jury, and if dissatisfied with the verdict, its power was limited to the granting of a new trial.

The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed.

Mount, O. J., Pttllebton, Hadley, Ceow, Poot, and Dunbae, JJ., concur.

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