Austin v. Portland Traction Co.

182 P.2d 412, 181 Or. 470, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 202
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 412 (Austin v. Portland Traction Co.) 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
Austin v. Portland Traction Co., 182 P.2d 412, 181 Or. 470, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 202 (Or. 1947).

Opinion

HAY, J.

This is an action for damages for negligence. The complaint alleges as follows: Plaintiff was a passenger on one of the defendant Portland Traction Company’s buses which was being driven northerly on Northwest Sixteenth Avenue in Portland. At the intersection of such street with Northwest Marshall Street a collision occurred between the traction company’s bus and a truck belonging to defendant Oregon Transfer Company. The transfer company was negligent in operating its truck at an unreasonable and imprudent rate of speed in view of the circumstances and conditions at the intersection, in failing to keep its truck under proper control, in failing to keep a proper lookout for traffic and particularly for the traction company’s bus, and in failing to yield the right of way to the bus. The traction company was negligent in failing to keep a proper lookout for traffic and particularly for the transfer company’s truck, in failing to keep its bus under control, and in operating its bus at an unreasonable and imprudent rate of speed. As a result of the collision, plaintiff suffered serious physical injuries of a permanent nature, for which damages in the sum of $15,000 are demanded. The defendants each admitted the collision, and each attributed it to the negligence of the other in the respects alleged in the complaint. In addition, the transfer company alleged that the accident was brought about by the traction company’s negligence in driving its bus into the intersection to the left of the center of Sixteenth Avenue, and in con- *473 tinning on in an undeviating line until it collided with the truck. Trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against defendant transfer company for $3,500. Its motion for a new trial was denied, and it has appealed from the judgment.

Sixteenth Avenue and Marshall Street intersect each other at right angles. Each street is thirty-six feet wide. The plaintiff, Mabel Austin, a woman of about sixty-five years of age, was a passenger upon the traction company’s bus, which was proceeding northerly on Sixteenth Avenue. At the intersection of that street and Love joy Street, which is one block south of the Marsha.ll Street intersection, the bus made a stop. Proceeding from that point, it entered the Marshall Street intersection at a speed estimated by witnesses to have been between twelve and twenty miles an hour. The easterly half of Sixteenth Avenue available for the passage of the bus was somewhat restricted in area by the presence of parked automobiles along the curb. When the bus had proceeded into the intersection to a point where the driver’s seat was about three feet beyond the south curb line of Marshall Street, the driver looked to his left and observed the transfer company’s truck proceeding easterly on Marshall Street toward the intersection and about one hundred feet west thereof. The bus proceeded into the intersection and was approximately two-thirds of the way through it when the collision occurred. There was evidence that the truck entered the intersection at a relatively high rate of speed, estimated by witnesses at from twenty-five to fifty miles an hour. More vividly and, we think, more reliably, one witness testified that it was going too fast to stop, and another that it was going too fast to make a turn. Immediately *474 prior to the collision, the bus appears to have followed an undeviating course, while the truck swerved sharply to the left, as indicated by skid marks or tire marks on the pavement. The bus, without passengers, weighed approximately ten tons and the loaded truck weighed approximately five tons. In the collision, the right front end of the truck came in contact with the bus at or near the left front wheel. The force of the impact was so severe that the truck driver was thrown from his vehicle and the bus driver was caused momentarily to lose control of the bus, which swerved to its right over the easterly curb of Sixteenth Avenue and proceeded one hundred twenty-three feet northerly beyond the point of impact, where it collided with a telephone pole. The truck traveled thirty-two feet beyond the point of impact before stopping.

The trial court withdrew from the jury the question of whether or not the traction company was negligent in driving its bus to the left of the center line of Sixteenth Avenue. This is assigned as error. Ordinarily, proximate cause presents a question of fact, to be determined by the jury. Miami Quarry Co. v. Seaborg Packing Co., 103 Or. 362, 370, 204 P. 492. It is a jury question whenever the facts upon which it depends are controverted, or are of such character that different minds might reasonably draw different conclusions therefrom. Voshall v. Northern Pacific Terminal Co., 116 Or. 237, 244, 240 P. 891; Schrunk v. Hawkins, 133 Or. 160, 169, 289 P. 1073; Maletis v. Portland Traction Co., 160 Or. 30, 36, 83 P. (2d) 141; 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, section 351. The transfer company contends that the court’s action deprived it of its theory of defense.

There was some evidence that the bus, at the time of the collision, was on its own side of Sixteenth *475 Avenue. We shall assume, however (and the weight of the evidence warrants such assumption) that in fact it projected one foot to the west of the center of the street. There was no marked center line. There were cars parked along the easterly curb of the street. South bound vehicles had met and passed the bus within the block between Lovejoy and Marshall Streets. There is considerable argument in the briefs upon the question of whether or not the fact that the front end of the truck extended beyond its front axle and wheels indicated that the actual point of impact was east of the center of the street. Such argument, however, appears to us, under the circumstances, to be irrelevant. The evidence shows that the truck approached and entered the intersection at an unreasonably high rate of speed. If the driver intended to make a left turn, the law required him to enter the intersection in the traffic lane to the right of and nearest to the center line of Marshall Street, and to leave it by passing to the right of the center line of Sixteenth Avenue. Section 115-334, O. C. L. A., as amended by chapter 428, Oregon Laws 1941. Under the circumstances, he could not have made a left turn in such manner without colliding with the bus. The bus had entered and was traversing the intersection at a reasonable speed. The evidence clearly indicates that it entered the intersection ahead of the truck. It had the right of way and the truck should have yielded. Section 115-337, O. C. L. A. In our opinion, reasonable minds could come to no other conclusion from the evidence than that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the truck driver in failing to keep a proper lookout for the bus, in driving at an unreasonable rate of speed, and in failing to yield the right of way to the bus.

*476 The transfer company argues that the driving of the bus one foot to the left of the center of Sixteenth Avenue, being in violation of a statute, was negligence as a matter of law. The rule of the road indeed requires a motor vehicle to be driven upon the right half of the highway, except when overtaking or passing another vehicle proceeding in the same direction. Section 115-327, O. C. L. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 412, 181 Or. 470, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-portland-traction-co-or-1947.