Canada v. ROYCE

257 P.2d 624, 199 Or. 196, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 228
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 257 P.2d 624 (Canada v. ROYCE) 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
Canada v. ROYCE, 257 P.2d 624, 199 Or. 196, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 228 (Or. 1953).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment for plaintiff in an action for damages for personal injuries based on negligence.

The accident in which plaintiff was injured occurred at a crosswalk at the intersection of S. W. 20th Avenue and S. W. Morrison Street in the city of Portland (hereinafter referred to as 20th Avenue and Morrison Street). The former street runs north and south and the latter east and west. The plaintiff, with her sister, Mrs. Georgia E. Robinson, had attended the dog races at Multnomah Civic Stadium, which is bounded on the west by 20th Avenue and the north by Morrison Street. The two women left the stadium at about midnight, when the races were over, by an exit near the intersection in question. They were accompanied by a Mrs. Cora Stewart, whom they met in the stadium. They were crossing Morrison Street in a northerly direction on their way to the parking area, where plaintiff had parked her car earlier in the evening, when the plaintiff was struck, as she alleges, by a taxicab operated by the defendants. She alleged in the second amended complaint, on which the case was tried, that the defendants were negligent in the following particulars: that defendants failed to yield the right of way to plaintiff, failed to maintain a proper lookout, and failed to have said taxicab under *198 proper control. On the trial plaintiff was permitted to amend by alleging a fourth ground of negligence, namely, the failure to sound the horn of the taxicab.

At the close of the evidence the defendants moved for a directed verdict. The court’s denial of the motion is assigned as error. We are of the opinion that the ruling was erroneous.

The evidence discloses the following facts:

At the time of the accident Morrison Street and 20th Avenue were filled with people who had just poured out of the stadium after the dog races. As plaintiff, Mrs. Eobinson, and Mrs. Stewart left the sidewalk at the southeast corner of the intersection and started across Morrison Street, walking in the pedestrian lane, the defendants’ taxicab was proceeding through the intersection in an easterly direction for the purpose of picking up passengers when he should reach the curb at the south side of Morrison Street east of 20th Avenue. According to the testimony of Fred M. Williams, the driver of the cab, he had been parked on Morrison Street just west of 20th Avenue for some time, waiting for the people to leave the stadium. According to witnesses for the plaintiff the cab came into the intersection from the north on 20th Avenue and then turned east into Morrison Street. For present purposes this dispute in the testimony is immaterial. The evidence shows that the driver made his way very slowly through the intersection because of the crowd. He would proceed a few feet, stop to let pedestrians go by, and then start up again. The plaintiff testified that she was watching the cab as it approached the crosswalk; that the cab stopped when she was about three feet in front of its right head light; that she looked to the right for traffic *199 coming from that direction; that she then looked to the left, and that, as she did so, “the cab gave a jerk and pulled right up”; that she jumped or stepped back and saw that the door of the cab was open; that her sister was on her left, slightly behind her, and that they did not have time to avoid a collision with the open door; that her sister was hit by the door, and that she was hit by her sister and thrown back against a lamp post at the curb on the south side of Morrison Street.

Mrs. Stewart was ahead of the other two women and crossed safely in front of the cab. She did not see the accident, though she heard the plaintiff scream.

Substantially, the plaintiff’s testimony was corroborated by Mrs. Robinson and Mrs. Rosie Richardson, an acquaintance of the plaintiff whom she and Mrs. Robinson met at the dog races. Mrs. Richardson testified that she saw the accident as she stood on the sidewalk on the south side of Morrison Street near 20th Avenue. All these witnesses watched the cab, according to their testimony, as it approached the crosswalk, and none of them testified, and there is no evidence in the record, that the cab door was open until immediately before the accident.

The driver of the cab, Fred M. Williams, testified that as he was driving slowly through the crowd “I felt my door open,” and that he looked back and saw a colored man walking back from the door, and saw Mrs. Robinson trying to get in the cab, and that “she bounded back or staggered back or something into another colored lady standing by the side of her.” On cross-examination he testified that he felt the door open “and just as I glanced around I saw him promptly take his hand from the door, that is, back, saw him *200 turn around.” There is no evidence that Williams knew that the door was open until just at the moment of the accident.

Three witnesses for the defendant corroborated Williams’ version of the accident. These were Mr. and Mrs. George D. Christensen and their son, Victor Christensen. After the races they were waiting for a cab on the south side of Morrison Street near 20th Avenue. Victor Christensen testified that he watched the defendants’ cab as it came across the intersection from the west side of 20th Avenue. Asked if he saw anyone near the cab he answered, “Yes, sir, I saw a tall, slim colored fellow. He ran out, and these other people appeared to be following him to catch the 'taxi, and I seen him open the door, and he kind of run along with the taxi as it moved and I — I would say that this lady was stepping into the taxi”, and was knocked down. George D. Christensen testified:

“Well, what I noticed, when I first noticed it just about opposite the lamp post as he was headed in towards the curb, and when I was according to about the head end of this cab I noticed a colored gentleman going to open the door, a colored lady like she was going to get in the cab, like they were ready to catch the cab, and they were looking for passage in a taxicab, and as the motion of the cab was still in motion very slowly that, apparently this door, opened. This lady stepped in. She kind of went down to her knees.”

Mrs. Christensen’s testimony was substantially to the same effect. After the accident the Christensens became passengers in the defendants’ cab and gave their names to the driver as witnesses.

The man who, according to the driver of the cab and the Christensens, had opened the cab door, gave *201 assistance to the plaintiff and her sister, and left the scene of the accident with them and accompanied them to the parking lot where plaintiff had left her car. The women, according to their testimony, did not know him, and his identity remains undisclosed.

The Christensens were disinterested witnesses, but their testimony was in conflict with that given by witnesses on behalf of the plaintiff and we must, therefore, treat the case as though the accident occurred in the manner sworn to by the latter. It is important to bear in mind, however, that the plaintiff does not charge in the second amended complaint that the door of the cab came open through any fault of the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P.2d 624, 199 Or. 196, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canada-v-royce-or-1953.