Ahonen v. Hryszko

175 P. 616, 90 Or. 451, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 221
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 175 P. 616 (Ahonen v. Hryszko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahonen v. Hryszko, 175 P. 616, 90 Or. 451, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 221 (Or. 1918).

Opinion

BENSON, J.

1, 2. Defendant argues that the trial court should have granted his motion for a judgment of nonsuit at the conclusion of, plaintiff’s case, and that it was also error to deny his motion for a directed verdict. These two assignments of error may properly be considered together, since each constitutes a demurrer to the evidence. This brings us to a consideration of the testimony in the case. It is agreed that the defendant was traveling in a northerly direction on Mississippi Avenue, while the plaintiff and his seven-year old sister were walking east on Fremont Street. Albert Kosciolek testifies that he saw plaintiff and his sister at the curb of the northwest corner of the intersection of the two streets; that the girl' stood on the curb, while the boy ran across the street; that the girl screamed for him to come back, and then while running back to the west side of the street he was struck by the automobile; that the auto was going fast; that it was going at the rate of fourteen or fifteen miles an hour; that the rear end of the car was fifteen feet beyond the boy when it stopped. He also says that defendant did not sound his horn, or give any warning [455]*455signal; that when defendant’s car reached the intersection of the two streets he pnt on his brakes and the car skidded over to the other side and struck the boy. Lena Rose testifies that when defendant reached the intersection he was traveling on the west, or left side of the street. The defendant himself testifies that he saw the children in the street while he was still sixty or seventy feet from them. As to the credibility of this evidence we cannot concern ourselves; that is the function of a jury, and if they believed these witnesses, they might very properly have found that the defendant was negligent and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. The motions for non-suit and a directed verdict were therefore properly denied.

3, 4. It is next urged that the court erred in admitting certain testimony of Dr. F. S. Tucker, as follows:

“Q. Do you know whether or not it [the fracture] extended into the motor area of the brain?
“A. Well, it was pretty close to the motor area, and sometimes you have a fracture of what is called the inner table of the skull, which does not show on the outside. That is the skull consists really of two layers of bone, of the spongy portion between, and it is im- ■ possible to tell sometimes how far the fracture of the inner table—
“To which question and answer, defendant by his counsel objected as follows:
“Mr. Brown: I object to this as to what might possibly be underneath. I object to the witness testifying to anything he does not know.
“The Court: Objection overruled. Exception allowed.
“To which the witness answered:
“A. To explain to you, the skull consists of two tables of bone with a spongy bone between the two. And sometimes a fracture may- extend further on the [456]*456inside than it does on the ontside. Of course a fracture of that kind cannot always be seen.
“The witness further said (page 35, Tr.) that he did not know whether the fracture extended into the motor area of the brain. ’ ’

This appears to us to be clearly within the realm of proper expert testimony, and if it were otherwise, the error was rendered harmless by the witness ’ assurance that he did not know whether or not the fracture extended into the motor area of the brain.

5.' The remaining assignments of error for which defendant contends, involve the subject of the court’s refusal to give to the jury three instructions which were requested by him. The first of these reads as follows:

“2. If the evidence shows that just prior to the accident the plaintiff in company with his sister crossed the street in front of the defendant’s automobile, you may find in view of all the circumstances that such crossing was as a matter of fact or in effect a warning to the plaintiff the danger of recrossing said street without-first looking to see if any vehicles were approaching, and if the plaintiff suddenly turned without warning, and apparently without looking, or heeding if he did look, and ran directly in front of the defendant’s automobile in an attempt to recross said street, he would then be guilty of such contributory negligence as would preclude him from a recovery even though the defendant were also negligent, and your verdict should be for the defendant.”

This instruction seeks to impose upon the court the burden of saying, as a matter of law, that a certain series of facts, in the given case, would constitute contributory negligence. It must be remembered that the plaintiff was a child, only five years of age. The case of Wallace v. Suburban Ry. Co., 26 Or. 174 (37 Pac. 477, 25 L. R. A. 663), was a personal injury case [457]*457wherein a child six years old was rnn over and hilled by a street-car, and in that instance, Mr. Chief Justice Bean, speaking for the court, says:

“If we assume that it can be asserted, as a proposition of law, that a child of the age of the deceased is sui juris, so as to be chargeable with negligence, the law is not so unreasonable or unjust as to require of it the same degree of reason and consideration in avoiding the consequences of the negligence of others that is required of persons of full age and capacity, and it should be left to the jury to determine whether the child in attempting to páss in front of the car, acted with that degree of care and prudence which might reasonably be expected, under the circumstances, of a child of her age and capacity. She was lawfully in the street, and was as much entitled to use the crossing as the defendant corporation. In attempting to do so she was run over and killed by the car of the defendant, running at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed. The negligence of the defendant must, therefore, be assumed, and it was for the jury to judge whether the child’s conduct in attempting to cross the track in front of the approaching car without looking or listening, was characterized by any want of that degree of care which could reasonably have been expected of a child of her age. ’ ’

This doctrine has been approved by this court in Schleiger v. Northern Terminal Co., 43 Or. 4 (72 Pac. 324), and it follows that the request was properly refused.

6, 7. The next request which was denied by the court was an instruction in this language:

“3. Even if the plaintiff, a child of immature years, proceeding in reckless haste, however natural to his age, should suddenly and unexpectedly run or throw himself in front of the defendant’s automobile while in motionj and such motion was not exceeding the speed limit, the driver of the car not seeing him, or in the [458]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 P. 616, 90 Or. 451, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahonen-v-hryszko-or-1918.