Bloomquist v. City of La Grande

251 P. 252, 120 Or. 19, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 2
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 251 P. 252 (Bloomquist v. City of La Grande) 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
Bloomquist v. City of La Grande, 251 P. 252, 120 Or. 19, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 2 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an action brought by the administratrix of the estate of Leroy Bloomquist, deceased, a child a little less than four years of age at the time of his death. The defendant, as the name indicates, is a municipal corporation working under an initiative charter. The plaintiff avers, in substance, that the City has power to control, improve and repair the streets within its boundaries and to abate and remove any nuisance therein. According to the complaint, North Second Street is improved its full length and where it crosses Division Street there is an irrigation ditch running along the latter street close to the southern boundary thereof, crossing Second Street by means of a concrete flume which conducts the water under the surface of the street, allow *21 ing it to rise again on the east side and continue on down Division Street. The cross-section of this flume is described in the testimony as being forty-two inches in width and twenty-one inches in depth. At its intake, or western end, there are two wings of concrete, flaring upstream somewhat like a funnel so that the water is concentrated into this narrow space, making it run quite swiftly through the conduit. It is said that there was a sidewalk along the west side of Second Street which had been allowed to get out of repair where it crossed the waterway so that people habitually traveled on the full width of the street up to the intake of the flume and that, although defendant had knowledge of the condition there for ample time within which to have repaired it, the walk had been allowed to remain in that condition without any guard-rail or screen, or other means, to protect anyone from falling into the water at that point. It is charged that on August 1, 1923, the minor decedent, at that time between three and four years of age, while lawfully traveling upon said Second Street came near to the west end of the flume, fell into the water there and was drowned to the damage of the plaintiff administratrix in the sum of $7,500.

The answer admits the representative character of the plaintiff, the incorporation of the defendant, the death of the decedent, and denies the rest of the complaint except as stated further in the answer. For a first defense it is charged, in substance, that the parents of the decedent allowed him to -run at large in the City, knowing that the ditch was open, carried water and was dangerous to children of that age; that the defendant and its officers had no knowledge or notice that the decedent did anything of that kind or ever went near the ditch; that Division Street *22 was not an improved street but in its natural condition and that the parents were negligent in allowing the plaintiff’s intestate to go alone without anyone to protect him, and to wander away from home; that the flume crossing North Second Street was at least three blocks from the decedent’s home and that he was not injured at that place or by reason of any work or defect in any work done or performed by the defendant, and that he was not injured at any place upon any public street or at any place where any work, building or construction was done by the City. It is charged that the decedent died leaving no lineal descendants whatever and that his parents are the sole heirs and distributees of his estate.

A second further and separate answer is in these words:

“That plaintiff’s intestate, at the time of the injury complained of, had no right or lawful authority to go upon the land or be at the place where said alleged injury occurred, and that said alleged injury occurred, if at all, upon lands not belonging to the said city, or upon streets which the city has not accepted or adopted as a highway or attempted to control, improve or repair, and plaintiff’s intestate would not have been injured if he had not committed said trespass.”

A third further and separate answer is here set down:

“That for many years last past, the tax levy of the City of La Grande has been inadequate to operate the city of La Grande and improve Division Street therein. That the constitutional limitation of a 6% advance each year does not give the said city sufficient money from the taxes with which to improve said street. That the value of the property adjoining-said Division Street is not sufficient to permit or allow the City of La Grande to levy assessments *23 therein, by the formation of an improvement district for local improvements, and the assessment of local improvements therefor. = That the charter and laws prevent the assessment of said lots for more than the valuation placed upon said lots by the County Assessor of Union County, Oregon, and that assessments in an improvement district for local assessments equal only to the value of the assessed valuation of said lots would not give sufficient money to improve said street.”

All the new matter in the answer was denied. There was a trial by jury, ending in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appealed.

The action is brought under Section 380, Or. L., reading thus:

“When the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another, the personal representatives of the former may maintain an action at law therefor against the latter, if the former might have maintained an action, had he lived, against the latter, for an injury done by the same act or omission. Such action shall be commenced within two years after the death, and damages therein shall not exceed $7500, and the amount recovered, if any, shall be administered as other personal property of the deceased person. ’ ’

The interest of the administratrix, although the individual occupying that representative position is the decedent’s mother, is precisely the same as if she had not been related in any way to the decedent. As parent, she is not at all concerned as a litigant in this action. She occupies the position as successor in interest to the decedent. The obstacles which he would have encountered had he lived are not different from those to be overcome by his personal representative in the instant action.

*24 The first further and separate answer is negligible because it does not show that on the occasion of the drowning of the decedent the negligence, if any, of the parents, or either of them, contributed to that result. They may have been negligent or not on other occasions, but it is not sufficient to charge it in general terms without showing that, in the accident involved, such carelessness contributed immediately to the injury. This, on the theory, which by the way is not well founded, that the negligence of the parents is imputed to the infant decedent. The great weight of authority is to the effect that under a statute like the one here involved, the negligence of an infant’s parents is not to be imputed to or to affect the rights of the infant or his personal representative.

The precedents cited by the city in the instant case in support of their contention that, where the parents are the sole beneficiaries of the child’s estate, their negligence will prevent a recovery are instances where the action is brought for the direct benefit of the parents and the proceeds of the judgment do not go into the estate but go directly to the parents as their individual property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 P. 252, 120 Or. 19, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomquist-v-city-of-la-grande-or-1926.