Crossler v. Safeway Stores, Inc.

6 P.2d 151, 51 Idaho 413, 80 A.L.R. 463, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 144
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1931
DocketNo. 5753.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 151 (Crossler v. Safeway Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crossler v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 6 P.2d 151, 51 Idaho 413, 80 A.L.R. 463, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 144 (Idaho 1931).

Opinion

*415 BUDGE, J.

—This action was brought by respondent against appellants seeking to recover damages for injuries sustained as a result of a collision occurring May 7, 1930, between a truck driven by the son of respondent and a truck driven by appellant, Kenneth Campbell, an employee of appellant, Safeway Stores, Inc. The cause was tried by the court and a jury and verdict was rendered in favor of respondent for $4,500 and judgment was entered thereon, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

The answer to the complaint herein contained, among other things, an affirmative defense of contributory negligence based upon a violation by respondent of the traffic ordinances of the city of Moscow, such traffic ordinances being attached to said answer as an exhibit. A motion to strike such affirmative defense, made by respondent, was sustained by the trial court, to which ruling appellants excepted and now assign as their first specification of error. Respondent, however, seeks to make the point that conceding appellants’ position to be correct and that the trial court erred in striking all reference to said ordinance as well as other matters connected therewith from appellants’ answer, such ruling of the court is not subject to review for the reason that appellants thereafter filed an amended answer and thereby waived any objection to such ruling. However after such ruling, and evidently in *416 an endeavor to comply therewith, although we deem it an unnecessary act, appellants filed what is designated as * ‘ amended answer, ’ ’ which, for all practical purposes, is nothing more than the original answer with the parts deleted that were ordered stricken by the court. In view of this situation and the rule announced in Warren v. Stoddart, 6 Ida. 692, there is no merit in respondent’s contention.

Accordingly we proceed to review such ruling. The collision occurred in the vicinity of what is known as Hays Hall, a girls’ dormitory at the University of Idaho, within the city of Moscow, which faces west on Blake Avenue, a public street of said city. Extending east from Blake Avenue along the south side of Hays Hall is a driveway which, when it reaches the southeast corner of the building, where the' collision occurred, turns to the north and extends along the east side of the building. With respect to the character of the driveway it is alleged in the complaint and admitted by appellants: “that the University of Idaho caused a private driveway to be constructed on the south east side of the said Hays Hall for the convenience of the public and for the convenience of the uses for which said Hays Hall is and was used, and that such driveway has been, at all times herein mentioned, used by the public with the consent and invitation of the owner for the purpose of delivering food products and other merchandise to said Hays Hall, and that the plaintiff was using such driveway on the 7th day of May, 1930.”

The affirmative defense ordered stricken contained the traffic ordinances of said city, section 16 thereof providing:

“It shall be unlawful for any person to be upon the running board or upon any other place on the outside of any motor vehicle, while such vehicle is in motion; and it shall be unlawful for the operator of any such motor vehicle to allow or permit any person to so be upon such places on such vehicle while it is in motion.”

And allegations to the effect that respondent was riding on the running-board on the outside of the truck driven by his son, which allegations were evidently intended as the basis *417 for proof of violation of a city ordinance and showing of contributory negligence thereby.

By the motion to strike, the question was presented as to whether or not the use of motor vehicles upon said driveway was subject to regulation by the traffic ordinances of the city of Moscow. It is apparent from the admitted allegations of the complaint, quoted above, that the driveway in question was a private one but used by the public with the consent and invitation of the owner. A similar situation received careful consideration by the supreme court of Massachusetts in the case of Commonwealth v. Gammons, 23 Pick. 201, where it is said:

“The single question presented here is, whether the place where the complainant and the defendant met, at the time of the collision, was a road, within the meaning of the statute. It appears that the place in question had not been laid out either as a highway or a town-way, and that the public had no rights in it, except by sufferance of the owners.The term ‘road’ is not necessarily limited to a public way; and there is nothing in the reason or purposes of that law, from which such a limitation can be implied. The object of the law is to prescribe a rule of conduct, for the convenience and safety of those, who may have occasion to travel and actually travel with carriages, on a place adapted to and fitted for travel, and actually used for that purpose, by a public laying out or by the dedication of the owners, or the actual permission and license of the owners, for the time being.The same reason applies to private roads, actually used, as to public roads, that is, roads to which the public have a permanent right, by laying out by prescription, or by dedication.
“Suppose a considerable number of persons should have a private right of way over a road, having estates adjacent thereto; is it not for their mutual safety and benefit, to have a known rule, to govern them in the enjoyment of this common right? Yet the owner of the soil, if he chooses, may exclude the public and all those who have not a right to the easement, by grant or prescription. Suppose a person, hav *418 ing a house at the distance of one or two hundred rods from the highway, should make and open a convenient road to it, and open his house as a place of business or amusement, as a tavern or boarding house or school, or even for the general accommodation of visitors and persons bringing supplies to the house, and by a general license and permission so long as it should suit his convenience, should thus tacitly invite all persons to enter and pass up and down his avenue •with their carriages,- all the reasons which render a rule of the road useful, salutary and mutually beneficial in public ways, apply with equal force to such an avenue.
.“The same considerations apply to courts and places in cities, paved and adapted to the purposes of travel, but upon which the owners choose to maintain a gate, to be occasionally closed, to rebut the presumption of a dedication. The owners may close them if they think fit, but when in fact they are open, and all persons are permitted by a general license to use them, they are roads, and the same reason applicable to other roads, applies to them. The same rule applies to wharves, on which there are ranges of warehouses, and along which there are usually streets and passages, though all private property.
“Upon the construction of the statute the Court are of opinion, that the term ‘road,’ used in the statute without qualification, applies in its ordinary acceptation to a place set apart and appropriated, either de jure or de facto,

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 151, 51 Idaho 413, 80 A.L.R. 463, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crossler-v-safeway-stores-inc-idaho-1931.