DocketNumber: No. 160-41394-3
Judges: Green
Filed Date: 8/24/1970
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Plaintiff, Jerry L. Lunsford, brought this action to recover for property damage and personal injuries arising from a motorcycle-automobile accident. From a jury verdict in favor of defendant, plaintiff appeals.
The accident occurred on March 28, 1968, shortly after 10 p.m. on East Chestnut Street in Yakima. East Chestnut Street is 52 feet wide, one-way, and westbound; there is angle parking on each side of the street. At the time of the accident, vehicles were parked along both sides of the street, leaving two lanes for traffic each about 11 feet wide.
Plaintiff testified as follows: He was traveling south on Second Street and stopped his motorcycle for a red light in the extreme right lane where it intersects East Chestnut Street, intending to turn right. Stopped alongside and to the left of plaintiff, but still in the right lane, was a vehicle occupied by two friends. Plaintiff was talking to them about where to park his motorcycle before they proceeded
Defendant Gae Ellen Neal testified as follows: She was driving north on Second Street in a 1956 2-door Chevrolet sedan, with two passengers in the front seat. At the intersection of Second Street and East Chestnut Street she stopped for a red light and signaled her intention to turn left. From there she observed the parking stalls on the right side of East Chestnut Street were taken. When the light changed, she waited for defendant to clear the intersection, but when he delayed doing so she turned left into the middle of the left lane of East Chestnut Street, at 5 to 10 miles per hour. As she proceeded at the same speed, she continued looking for a vacant parking staE; she saw empty parking stalls ahead on the left side of the street; she looked to the rear and saw no vehicles; she swerved to the right about 3 feet over the center line, slowed down
Officer Raymond K. Farabee investigated the accident and fixed the point of impact 80 feet west of the west curb line of Second Street on East Chestnut Street and 4 feet 7 inches south of the center line of the street in the left lane of travel.
Plaintiff’s version of the accident was substantiated by the testimony of the two occupants of the following car. Defendant’s version of the accident was substantiated by the testimony of her two passengers.
The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. Written on the form of verdict were the words “contributory negligence.”
First, plaintiff contends the court erred in submitting the following instruction on the sounding of a horn:
You are instructed that it is provided by Yakima City ordinance that:
(e) Every motor vehicle shall be equipped with a suitable horn, which shall be sounded at any time when such vehicle is approaching a condition of danger or where, in the exercise of due care, warning should be made or at such times or under such conditions as required by law. ... A motorcycle is a motor vehicle.
There is no evidence that plaintiff sounded his horn; defendant testified she heard none. Plaintiff takes the position that under either version of the accident there is no evidence from which the jury could infer that he was “approaching a condition of danger” or that a “situation existed” requiring him to sound his horn. We disagree. Plaintiff testified that when defendant slowed down soon after
Second, plaintiff contends the court erred in submitting an instruction on the duty of a person to operate a vehicle in a careful and prudent manner and at a reasonable and proper speed.
You are instructed that it is provided by an ordinance of the City of Yakima that:
Every person operating a vehicle of any character upon a public street or alley shall operate the same in a careful and prudent manner and 'at a rate of speed no greater than is reasonable and proper under the conditions existing at the point of operation, taking into account the amount and character of traffic, condition of brakes, weight of vehicle, grade and width of highway, condition of surface, and- freedom of obstruction to view ahead, and consistent with any and all conditions existing at the point of operation so as not to unduly or unreasonably endanger the life, limb, property or other rights of any person entitled to the use of the street or alley . .' .
Plaintiff contends that since there was no evidence, direct or physical, of .excessive or unreasonable. speed under the
Third, plaintiff contends the court erred in failing to submit two proposed instructions setting out portions of ordinances of the city of Yakima defining the position from which turns must be made. We believe the trial court properly refused to give these instructions. The portions of those instructions relating to turns applicable to the instant case were adequately covered in the instructions given.
Last, plaintiff claims the trial court erred in failing to grant motion for new trial based on misconduct of a juror. The alleged misconduct enumerated in affidavits submitted by the court clerk, court bailiff, and plaintiff’s counsel is that the juror: whispered, caused his chair to squeak, distracted other jurors, placed a cigarette in his mouth during the trial, left the jury room without permission during the trial, had a drink during lunch while the trial was in progress, and attempted to get a drink while the jury was out to dinner during its deliberation. It is plaintiff’s position the entire misconduct did not come to counsel’s or the court’s attention until after the trial. However, plaintiff acknowledges that during the early stages of the trial, some of the
Judgment affirmed.
Evans, C. J., and Munson, J., concur.