104 Wash. 441 | Wash. | 1918
The plaintiff, while riding a motorcycle upon one of the streets of the city of Seattle, suffered personal injuries and damages to his machine as the result of a collision with a motor truck driven by an employee of the defendant. On a trial before a jury, there was a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered. The defendant interposed motions for nonsuit, for judgment notwithstanding
The evidence of both parties shows that the collision occurred at the intersection of Dearborn street and Seattle Boulevard, the former street running east and west, and the latter crossing it diagonally in a course from northwest to southeast. The evidence on the part of the respondent, which the jury evidently believed, shows that he was riding northwesterly on the right side of the boulevard at a speed of about twelve miles per hour, when he observed the motor truck of the appellant approaching him, proceeding southeast along the same street or boulevard at about the same rate of speed; that both vehicles were on the same side of the street, that of the appellant being on the wrong side, under the city ordinances, by reason of its being upon the left side of the street according to the course pursued by it; that, as the two vehicles were approaching one another face on, the vehicle of the appellant was made to swerve to the right as if to cross over to the right-hand side of the street, which was the proper one for its course; that the driver for appellant, however, after swinging to the right, suddenly veered to the left in order to turn into Dearborn street, and that, at that time, the respondent was so close to the motor truck that he did not have sufficient opportunity to stop his machine and avoid a collision,'though he made every effort to do so; that the motorcycle crashed into the truck just behind the forward wheel, and that the respondent was catapulted against the truck, suffering injuries to his chest and shoulders serious enough to require the services of a physician and to disable him from work for a period of eighteen days.
The appellant attempts to bring itself within the rule announced by us in Jahn & Co. v. Paynter, 99 Wash. 614, 170 Pac. 132, where we held that a motor vehicle first entering upon a street intersection and making a turn therein has the right of way, so as to avoid the charge of negligence against it in case of a collision with another vehicle entering the right of way immediately thereafter. But the instant case is distinguishable from the fact that the appellant was upon the wrong side of the street when it entered the intersection, and from the fact that the automobile driver, by his uncertain course in deviating first to one side and then swinging to the reverse, misled the respondent at a time when it was too late for him to avoid the collision.
The judgment is affirmed.