Court Opinion

ID: 4730421
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:55:17.438255+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:08:01.313705
License: Public Domain

Chadwick, J.
On April 1 é, 1908, plaintiffs were returning from a funeral at Mount Vernon. The way led over a viaduct, or an overhead crossing of the Great Northern railway tracks, which was about three hundred feet long. Their buggy was the first vehicle in front of the hearse, which was driven by defendants. The hearse was followed by several teams. Plaintiffs had entered the viaduct and were about half way over, when the hearse and team driven by defendants came upon the viaduct. The hearse team got beyond the control of the driver and, in passing, collided with the vehicle in which the plaintiffs were riding, and threw Mrs. Kimble to the ground. She suffered painful injuries, and now seeks compensation in damages. After plaintiffs had rested their case, defendants moved for a nonsuit, which, was denied. After the whole case was in, defendants moved for a directed verdict, which motion was granted. Judgment of dismissal was entered, and plaintiffs have appealed.
It is the theory of the plaintiffs, that defendants carelessly and negligently drove upon the viaduct at a time when a train was approaching in plain view of the driver; that the team became frightened at the passing train and ran against the plaintiffs’ buggy; that it was the duty of the defendants to stop their team at the approach of the viaduct and wait until the train had passed. The gist of the complaint is that the defendants
“did then and there with a team of horses attached to said hearse in the joint possession and under the joint control of the said defendant Frank Stackpole, and the said defendant Frank Essef, by and through his said agent and servant, while driving and operating said team and hearse in a careless and negligent manner, did carelessly and negligently drive said team and hearse, while under their joint control as hereinbefore alleged, against and upon the plaintiff Clara Kimble, whereby the said Clara Kimble was greatly injured.”
*37The answer is in the form of a general denial, with an affirmative plea of contributory negligence.
The first error assigned is that the court erred in admitting testimony to the effect that the team drawing the hearse was beyond the control of defendants when it reached and passed over the viaduct, and also when it ran against the buggy in which appellants were riding. This contention is grounded upon the theory that it is nowhere alleged that the team was running away, and that respondents should be bound by the allegations contained in their affirmative answer. We do not understand the rule to be that a lack of control over the team must have been specially pleaded to admit the evidence complained of. Appellants had alleged that the accident occurred at a time when the team was under the control of respondents. A general denial put this allegation in issue, and it was competent to offer any evidence that would challenge or defeat the truth of this assertion. Nor is the plea of contributory negligence inconsistent with the general denial. Where the defense rests upon a denial with plea of confession and avoidance, it is not inconsistent unless the one necessarily and actually contradicts the other. A seeming or logical inconsistency is not enough. Bowers v. Good, 52 Wash. 384, 100 Pac. 848; Irwin v. Holbrook, 32 Wash. 349, 73 Pac. 360; Davis v. Seattle Nat. Bank, 19 Wash. 65, 52 Pac. 526; Loveland v. Jenkins-Boys Co., 49 Wash. 369, 95 Pac. 490; Corbitt v. Harrington, 14 Wash. 197, 44 Pac. 132. This is a general rule and is applied where a general denial is followed by the plea of contributory negligence. Pugh v. Oregon Imp. Co., 14 Wash. 331, 44 Pac. 547, 689; Glass v. Colman, 14 Wash. 635, 45 Pac. 310.
It is next insisted that the court should have allowed plaintiffs to show on rebuttal that the team was not beyond the control of the defendants at the time it was driven on the viaduct. It would seem from the record that practically every eyewitness, including the defendants, had been sworn and testified in plaintiffs’ behalf. This question had been *38fully covered by the case in chief. Appellants’ witnesses in rebuttal had already testified; one, that the hearse was going at the rate of ten miles an hour; another, eight or ten miles an hour while it was yet two blocks from the viaduct, and another that it was going at a “stiff gait.” These witnesses, as well as others, had detailed the occurrence fully, and- the court properly refused to recall the witnesses who had testified in chief.
It is also urged that the court erred in directing a verdict. ■Our attention is invited to the case of Abby v. Wood, 43 Wash. 379, 86 Pac. 558. In that case the proximate cause •of the injury was the intoxication of the defendant. In this case there is no evidence showing negligence or from which negligence could be reasonably inferred. What caused the team to run away is not made to appear with any degree of •certainty. It is not,shown that the team was fractious, or that defendants should have used more than ordinary care and prudence under the circumstances attending the accident. The horses were livery horses. One of them had been worked on the hearse three years, and the other five years. At the time they had attained such speed as to indicate that they were beyond the control of the driver, there was no way open but the viaduct. An honest and earnest endeavor was made to pass appellants’ buggy, even to driving upon an elevated footway at the side of the wagon road. Both respondents had hold of the lines and tried to stop the team. One of them called out to appellants and warned them so that they might drive to one side. The rule of care in such cases is ordinary care, or such care as prudent men ordinarily use under like circumstances, taking into consideration the time, place, and condition of the highway. A driver will not be charged with negligence unless it appears from the evidence that, by the exercise of ordinary care or watchfulness, he could have seen the danger to which a person on the highway is exposed in time to avoid the injury.
The mere driving of the team on the viaduct while another *39team was on it could not be held to be negligence as a matter of law, it being shown that there was room for one team to pass another. Mr. Kimble, who was just ahead of respondents, saw the train, he fixed it at about a quarter of a mile away, and.he “saw that he had time to drive over.” Respondents may have judged in the same way. Whether they were negligent in driving over a viaduct when a train was approaching would depend primarily upon the character of the team. There is no evidence tending to show, nor was any effort made to prove, that the team was fractious or liable to become frightened at railroad trains.
A case in point is that of Cadwell v. Arnheim, 152 N. Y. 182, 46 N. E. 310, wherein it was said:
“It will not do to submit a question of negligence to a jury, where the facts are equally consistent with the presence or the absence of negligence; or where the jury could do no more than surmise as to the negligence of the defendant. The difficulty with the plaintiff’s case was that the facts failed either to disclose any fault in the driver of the defendant’s horses, or to warrant a jury in deciding that he could have controlled the action of the frightened animals. . . . On the other hand, there was the testimony of the coachman himself, which was not shaken, or affected as to his credibility, by the evidence of any facts, to the effect that all his efforts to stop, or to direct, the horses, were futile. ... To submit the case to- the jury, under the evidence, was to invite their speculation upon the question; with nothing in the facts to militate against the truth of the coachman’s statements.”
To the like effect is the case of Cotton v. Wood, 8 C. B. Rep. (N. S.) 566, where it is said by Williams, J.:
“There is another rule of the law of evidence, which is of first importance, and is fully established in all the courts, viz., that, where the evidence is equally consistent with either view, — with the existence or nonexistence of negligence, — it is not competent to the judge to leave the matter to the jury. The party who affirms negligence has altogether failed to establish it. That is a rule which ought never to be lost sight of.”
*40The case was one of negligent driving. This principle has been frequently announced by this court. The cases are collected in Whitehouse v. Bryant Lumber & Shingle Mill Co., 50 Wash. 563, 97 Pac. 751. It was there said:
“No legitimate inference can be drawn that an accident happened in a certain way by simply showing that it might have happened in that way, and without further showing that it could not reasonably have happened in any other way.”
We agree ivith the trial judge that the cause of the runaway was not shown, that the team was beyond the control’ of the respondents at and before the time the accident occurred, and that, so far as the evidence shows, the accident cannot be charged to the negligence of the respondents. Mrs. Kimble was the victim of an accident for which the law allows no compensation.
The judgment is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Morris, and Gose, JJ., concur.