Lenover v. Beckman
Decision Date | 21 January 1927 |
Docket Number | 20083. |
Citation | 142 Wash. 98,252 P. 533 |
Parties | LENOVER et al. v. BECKMAN et ux. |
Court | Washington Supreme Court |
Department 2.
Appeal from Superior Court, King County; Gilliam, Judge.
Action by W. R. Lenover and another, copartners doing business under the firm name and style of the Valley Milk Transportation against Henry Beckman and wife. Judgment for plaintiffs, and defendants appeal. Affirmed.
Carl J Smith, of Seattle, for appellants.
Alex Dickinson, of Seattle, for respondents.
In this case the plaintiffs undertook to recover damages of the defendants because of an automobile collision. The case was tried to the court without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs. The appellants seem to admit that there was sufficient evidence on the question of their negligence and the contributory negligence of the respondents to justify the judgment. At any rate, they do not here raise those questions. Consequently, it will not be necessary for us to state the facts in this regard.
Practically the only ground for reversal is that the evidence is insufficient to support a judgment against the community consisting of the appellant Henry Beckman and his wife. The trial court found that the automobile which was being driven by the appellant Henry Beckman at the time of the collision belonged to the community. He testified that he did not own it, but that it belonged to his daughter, and that he had taken it without her knowledge or consent and was driving it at the time of the accident for his own pleasure. He also introduced in evidence a statement in the nature of a bill of sale running from the former owner of the car to the daughter, which bill of sale is dated some two years before the accident. On the other hand, the respondents' testimony shows that the auto was at the home of the appellants, that they had made application for a license for the car for the year 1925, such application being signed by Henry Beckman, by his agent, one Waltersdorph, that the license plate thus issued had been placed on the auto, and that shortly after the accident the appellant Henry Beckman told a policeman that he was the owner of the car. The appellant denied that the man Waltersdorph had any authority to represent him in getting the license, or that he even knew him.
Neither Mrs. Beckman nor the daughter was produced as a witness although the testimony indicates that they could...
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Wright v. Safeway Stores, Inc.
... ... State v. Constantine, 48 Wash. 218, 93 P. 317; ... Glasgow v. Nicholls, 124 Wash. 281, 214 P. 165, 35 ... A.L.R. 419; Lenover v. Beckman, 142 Wash. 98, 252 P ... 533; ... [109 P.2d 544] Wood v. Miller, 147 Wash. 251, 265 P. 727; ... Rosenstrom v. North Bend ... ...
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Walker v. Herke, 29169.
... ... failing to call them. See, Glasgow v. Nicholls, 124 ... Wash. 281, 214 P. 165, 35 A.L.R. 419; Lenover v ... Beckman, 142 Wash. 98, 252 P. 533; Gardner v ... Herbert, 165 Wash. 429, 5 P.2d 782; ... [147 P.2d 260] Warren v ... ...