Schultz v. Cheney School Dist. No. 360, Spokane County
| Court | Washington Supreme Court |
| Writing for the Court | ROSELLINI; FINLEY; FOSTER |
| Citation | Schultz v. Cheney School Dist. No. 360, Spokane County, 371 P.2d 59, 59 Wn.2d 845 (Wash. 1962) |
| Decision Date | 26 April 1962 |
| Docket Number | No. 35623 |
| Parties | Vicki Lynn SCHULTZ, a minor, by her Guardian Ad Litem, William B. Schultz, Appellant, v. CHENEY SCHOOL DITRICT NO. 360, SPOKANE COUNTY, State of Washington, Respondent. |
Del Cary Smith and Del Cary Smith, Jr., Spokane, for appellant.
MacGillivray, Jones, Clarke & Jones, Willard W. Jones, Spokane, for respondent.
This is a personal injury action in which the jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The evidence showed that the plaintiff fell or was thrown from her seat in the defendant's school bus when it was driven off the highway into a ditch. This occurred because the attention of the driver was diverted momentarily from the road when a bee flew in the window and stung him on the neck. He ducked his head and tried with his left hand to extricate the bee from under his collar. While he was thus engaged the bus veered to the left and onto the shoulder of the road, a distance of about 75 feet.
At this point the driver raised his head and perceived what had happened. He endeavored to turn the bus back onto the road, but because of the soft condition of the shoulder, he was unable to do so and the bus went down into a shallow ditch, tilting first to the left and then to the right before it could be stopped. It was this motion of the bus that caused the plaintiff to fall into the aisle.
There was no contention that the driver was operating the bus in a negligent manner before the bee stung him. But the plaintiff urged in the trial court, and now urges here, that the evidence showed that he was negligent as a matter of law in failing to keep the bus under control after that incident. The testimony was that only a few seconds passed between the moment of the bee sting and the moment the driver discovered that the bus had veered across the highway. He testified that the sting startled him and that the bee continued to buzz under his collar after it had stung him.
We think the trial court correctly decided that it was for the jury to determine whether his action in lowering his head and endeavoring with one hand to remove the bee was instinctive or whether reasonable care required him to maintain control of the bus in spite of this painful distraction. It is not a question that can be decided as a matter of law.
The defendant, by its answer, denied negligence and affirmatively alleged that the accident was unavoidable. Error is assigned to the giving of an instruction defining 'unavoidable accident.'
The plaintiff does not quarrel with the instruction as a correct statement of the law, but contends first that it was inapplicable in this case because the defendant was negligent as a matter of law, and second that such an instruction should never be given because it is misleading and superfluous.
For the reason previously stated in this opinion, there is no merit...
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Handler v. Osman
...appellants have cited O'Connell v. Home Oil Co. (1935), 180 Wash. 461, 40 P.2d 991. That case, as well as Schultz v. Cheney School District, 159 Wash.Dec. 859, 371 P.2d 59, involved an affirmance of a trial court for having granted an unavoidable accident instruction. In the recent case of ......
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State v. McLaughlin
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Blood v. Allied Stores Corp.
...shows or justifies an inference that an unavoidable accident has occurred, as that term has been defined.' Schultz v. Cheney School Dist. No. 360, 59 Wash.2d 845, 371 P.2d 59. The rule is stated in Cooper v. Pay-N-Save Drugs, Inc., 59 Wash.2d 829, 835, 371 P.2d 43, wherein we '* * * stated ......