Bowerman v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System, Inc.

284 P. 579, 132 Or. 106, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 186
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 284 P. 579 (Bowerman v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System, Inc.) 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
Bowerman v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System, Inc., 284 P. 579, 132 Or. 106, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 186 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

BELT, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision occurring on February 10, 1928, about 4:30 in the afternoon, between an auto stage and a school bus. The plaintiff, a young woman 19 years of age, was a passenger on an automobile stage owned and operated by the defendant Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System, Inc., a corporation. The stage was traveling in an easterly direction on the Columbia River highway. The bus, owned by defendant M. G. Mooney, was used in transporting school children from Hood River to their homes. When the bus reached the end of its route at a small station called Sonny, near to and west of Mitchell Point, it was driven off the pavement on the north side on a graveled parking space in front of a gasoline station in order to turn around and go back towards Hood River. Before starting to turn, the bus ran parallel to the pavement for about 40 feet. The driver of the bus, A. D. Tomlinson, thus testified as to how the accident occurred: “When I started to turn back onto the pavement I swung out the window and looked back to see nobody was coming from behind, and come right around on the pavement, and I got here, near the center, and, why, the bus was in the way and I could not go any farther.”

*109 ‘ ‘ Q. Had you looked west before you started across the pavement?
“A. I did.
“Q. At what point did you look west?
“A. Just before I started to turn.
He He He He He
“Q. Did you see anyone there?
“A. I saw nothing at all.
He He He He He
“Q. Did the bus sound any horn that you heard after you started across the pavement?
“A. Yes, sir. Just before the crash, the instant the crash occurred.
He He H* He He
“Q. Did you stop before entering the highway?
“A. I didn’t.
“Q. Did you slow up?
“A. I slowed up a little; I just naturally let the engine run along when I run off the highway here, why, just let it run along; it didn’t slow up to amount to anything.
“Q. In what gear was your car?
“A. I think I was in high.
He He He He He
“Q. How far could you see from where you were just before you started across the highway?
“A. I could see up to the turn, I should judge about two hundred feet.”
Nielands, the driver of the stage, gave the following version of the accident:
“Q. Now, as you came around this point, or this curve to the west of the place where the accident happened and observed the school bus leaving the pavement, tell us what your next observations were.
“A. Why, my next observations of him were that he was pulling out there to stop and stay there until I went by.
H« He He He He
“Q. What did he do?
“A. He pulled out there and stopped.
*110 “Q. And when he came to a stop, about how far west of the school bus was his stage?
“A. When he stopped I must have been fifty feet away from him.
“Q. And did you observe him after that?
“A. Yes; I watched him.
“Q. And when you came up to pass, had you observed any change in his position?
“A. None whatever.
“Q. Did you know that he had started until the collision took place?
“A. Well, yes.
“Q. How did you know that?
“A. Why, in passing him I seen just, you might say, something coming toward me and it was too late; I could not do a thing. ’ ’

The school bus struck the stage in the center almost at a right angle. As a result of the collision, a piece of glass from one of the stage windows struck plaintiff in the eye, injuring it to such an extent that it was' later necessary to remove it.

Plaintiff’s theory of the case as expressed in her complaint is that the defendants are joint tort-feasors and that their combined and concurrent acts of negligence caused the injuries of which she complains. A demurrer of the defendant School District to the complaint was sustained by the trial court, whereupon the other defendants answered separately, each alleging the negligence of the other as the cause of the collision.

Verdict and judgment were had in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants M. G. Mooney and E. C. Mooney in the sum of $25,000.

Plaintiff, not being satisfied with a judgment against only the defendants above named, appeals, assigning as error the failure to give an instruction relative to measure of damages. The amount of the verdict does not indicate that the plaintiff has any *111 cause to complain in that respect. Her counsel frankly stated, in substance, on oral argument, that if the judgment could be satisfied the plaintiff would not be here on appeal. At any rate the court fully and properly instructed the jury as to the measure of damages.

Defendants Mooney appealed, asserting that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the defendant School District to the complaint. It was alleged in the complaint that School District No. 2 had entered into a contract with E. C. Mooney whereby he agreed to transport and carry school children from a station on the Columbia River highway known as Sonny to all points east as far as Hood River. Hnder the terms of this contract the School District “reserved the right to participate in the selection and control of the driver of said truck and in the operation of said truck * * It is further alleged that the School District did employ a driver who was operating the truck at the time of collision and that “E. C. Mooney and M. G. Mooney and School District No. 2 retained joint and several control over the method and manner and conditions of the operation and use of said truck, and said truck at the time of said collision * * * was being operated under and by virtue of the joint and several control of said E. C. Mooney, M. G. Mooney and School District No. 2.”

The admission of the defendants Mooney that they were the owners of the school bus and in control of its operation was sufficient to constitute a prima facie ease of liability for damages sustained through the negligence of their servant, the driver of the bus. Foster v. Farra et al., 117 Or. 286 (243 P. 778), and numerous authorities therein cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 579, 132 Or. 106, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowerman-v-columbia-gorge-motor-coach-system-inc-or-1929.