Blair v. RICE

246 P.2d 542, 195 Or. 587, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 221
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 246 P.2d 542 (Blair v. RICE) 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
Blair v. RICE, 246 P.2d 542, 195 Or. 587, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 221 (Or. 1952).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment which the circuit court entered in favor of the defendants after it had sustained a motion made by them for an involuntary nonsuit. The plaintiff, while a passenger in an automobile which her husband was operating, sustained a personal injury when the car skidded upon a section of icy pavement and crashed into a truck which was owned by the defendants, Thomas E. Fletcher and Norris Winzler. The truck was not in operation at the time of the collision. The driver was the defendant, Boy Bice.

*589 The complaint avers:

“Said collision was caused by the carelessness, 'recklessness and negligence of the defendants and each of them in the following particulars, to-wit:
“1. That said defendants parked said truck on said highway knowing at said time that the area immediately south thereof was covered with ice and was dangerous for motor vehicles.
“2. That said defendants parked said truck on said highway without displaying any flares, flags or signal to warn approaching motor vehicles.
“3. That said defendants failed to maintain any lookout for motor vehicles approaching said highway at said time and place.
“4. That said defendants parked said truck on the main traveled portion of said highway when there was adequate room to park said truck on the shoulder of said roadway.
“That said acts of negligence and each of them were the sole and proximate cause of the collision and the injuries sustained by plaintiff.”

The mishap occurred January 8,1949, at about 3:00 p. m. upon Highway 99E, a short distance north of Hubbard. The pavement is 27 feet or more broad. The plaintiff testified:

“It was a beautiful day. The sun was shining. It was cool, but it was a very nice day, and the highway wasn’t—didn’t seem dangerous to us in the least. It was dry, and we were going, I imagine, about 40 miles an hour.”

The car in which the plaintiff was riding was traveling north and had followed for several miles a car which was a short distance ahead.

Although the complaint alleges that the “defendants parked said truck on said highway”, their brief *590 says that it “was engaged in salvaging or towing an unidentified panel or pick-up truck from the ditch on the east side of the highway.” It will be recalled that the defendant, Bice, was the operator of the truck. The brief (plaintiff’s) says:

“Bice had parked defendants’ truck in a position facing northwesterly or cater-corner to the highway (Tr. 19), partially on the shoulder, and protruding into the northbound traffic lane (Tr. 3). The left-hand side of the cab and part of the bed of the truck were out on the pavement (Tr. 5). That Bice was acting within the scope of his authority is not denied.”

After the brief described the day and the dryness of the pavement in words similar to those which we took from the plaintiff’s testimony, it continues as follows:

“At a point some 200 feet south of the place of impact (Tr. 6,10), plaintiff and her husband noticed that the Blair car was upon a patch of ice. At the same time (Tr. 3, 19), they noticed that the car immediately preceding them had started to skid. Then the Blair car went into a skid, contacting the vehicle ahead and sending it across the highway in a northwesterly direction. It was not until the latter vehicles were actually on the ice and the sldd of the preceding vehicle was observed by them, that the Blairs saw defendants’ truck in the northbound traffic lane directly ahead of them (Tr. 3,19). After bumping the preceding car, the Blair car skidded practically straight ahead in its right traffic lane (Tr. 4), side swiping defendants’ truck and coming to a rest in a position in its right lane and against the truck (Tr. 4, 5).
“The icy patch of roadway extended from the proximity of defendants’ truck and the vehicle in the ditch to a point some 150 to 200 feet south (Tr. 10). The surface of the highway over which the Blairs had been driving up to this point had been dry (Tr. 3, 19). Defendants had posted no flag *591 men, watchmen, or warning devices of any type at any place to the south of their towing operation at which point their vehicle was left standing on the roadway (Tr. 5,16, 20).”

None of the plaintiff’s witnesses gave any indication of the length of time that the defendants’ vehicle had been in the position mentioned in the passages which we quoted from the plaintiff’s brief. So far as we know, it may have been there for no more than a very short interval. All of the witnesses referred to it as a truck. It will be recalled that the plaintiff’s brief says that the truck “was engaged in salvaging or towing an unidentified panel or pick-up truck from the ditch on the east side of the highway.” Apparently that statement is based upon the following testimony which was given by one of the witnesses: “It looked like some tracks where they might have pulled the vehicle or something out there, and there was a chain on the car in the ditch.”

The plaintiff’s husband testified:

“Q There was a straight stretch of highway leading up to the point of that accident for some distance, isn’t there?
“A That’s right.”

Another witness, who was driving from the south, swore:

“As I approached the scene and while still some distance from it I recognized the fact that there had been an accident at that point.”

A witness driving from the north, who came upon the scene of the collision a few moments after it had occurred, noticed the efforts which were under way to separate the plaintiff’s car from the defendants’ truck and altered his course. We set forth the above because *592 it indicates that the highway was straight and that drivers conld see cars which were ahead.

The record contains no evidence which imputes to the defendants knowledge of the ice which was upon the pavement. The icy area, it will be recalled, extended along the pavement for possibly 200 feet. The record does not suggest that there was space adjacent to the pavement for the accommodation of the truck so that it could have been placed completely off the paved roadway.

Neither the plaintiff nor her husband had observed the ice upon the pavement until after their car had entered upon it. Evidently the driver of the car ahead also had failed to observe the treacherous condition. Those facts warrant an inference that the ice was not readily noticeable. The record does not indicate how it happened that the panel vehicle was in the ditch, nor does it offer any explanation for the presence of the defendants’ truck at the place where it was struck, except so far as an explanation is afforded by the testimony which we have set forth.

The foregoing, we believe, is a fair synopsis of the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 P.2d 542, 195 Or. 587, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-rice-or-1952.