Davis v. Springer

275 P. 600, 128 Or. 582, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 64
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 275 P. 600 (Davis v. Springer) 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
Davis v. Springer, 275 P. 600, 128 Or. 582, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 64 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

BAND, J.

Plaintiff, a pedestrian, while crossing a public street intersection in the City of Portland, was knocked down and run over by defendant’s truck while it was being operated by a servant of defendant. She brought this action to recover damages for the injuries sustained and, from a judgment in her favor, defendant has appealed.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in granting plaintiff’s application to amend her complaint while the cause was being tried. During the trial, plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove the amount she had earned per month prior to the *585 accident by giving dancing lessons and musical instruction, and working for Meier & Prank Company as a saleswoman. This evidence was objected to as not within the issues and, before the court ruled thereon, plaintiff moved the court for leave to amend the complaint by interlineation. The application was granted and defendant then moved for a continuance on the ground of surprise. His motion was overruled and an exception taken to both rulings. Before amendment, one of the allegations of the complaint was that, prior to the accident,

“plaintiff was strong and capable of working and following classical dancing, and following her pleasures and pursuits of life, without mental or physical handicap, but since said accident, and by reason thereof, caused by the carelessness and negligence of defendant, this plaintiff has been unable to carry on her pursuits of happiness, or work, without great physical pain, and plaintiff’s earning capacity has been and will be destroyed for a long period of time in the future, and by reason of the injuries sustained by plaintiff, as hereinafter alleged, plaintiff’s earning capacity will be impaired for the remainder of her natural life, and her injuries are permanent.”

The amendment complained of was the insertion by plaintiff after the word “dancing,” in the paragraph above quoted, of the words:

“and instructor and teacher of banjo and ukelele for ■ profit, and earned $140 per month prior to said accident as an average wage and salary.”

The authority of the trial court to permit a pleading to be amended after the commencement of the trial and before it is finally submitted is conferred by Section 102, Or. L. The effect and meaning of the statute have received the consideration of this court in numerous cases and it would seem that the *586 power of the court to permit amendments and the limitation upon such power are now thoroughly settled in this state by the former decisions of this court. Among the decisions which we think are controlling here are Baldock v. Atwood, 21 Or. 73 (26 Pac. 1058); Cook v. Croisan, 25 Or. 475 (36 Pac. 532); Davis v. Hannon, 30 Or. 192 (46 Pac. 785); Talbot v. Garretson, 31 Or. 256 (49 Pac. 978), and by the later decisions of this court where the doctrine announced in those cases has been followed.

It was held in the Baldoek ease that while parties are in court they should be permitted to shape their pleadings so as to present the real questions at issue and to have the litigation determined with as little delay and expense as possible, and that they ought not to be turned out of court without a trial of the matters in litigation because of some defect in the pleading not discovered until during the progress of the case where, by an amendment, the defect could be supplied and the action or suit be brought to an early determination.

In the Cook case it was held in an opinion written by Mr. Chief Justice Lord that the practice of allowing amendments liberally so as to enable the parties while in court to have their differences settled and determined has been uniformly approved and encouraged by the courts where the proposed amendments did not change the controversy between the parties and could not take either by surprise, and that the granting or refusing of an application to amend is addressed to the discretion of the trial court and, generally, is reviewable only for the purpose of determining whether there has been an abuse of such discretion, but that this power is not entirely *587 discretionary but is granted to advance justice and should be exercised liberally in proper cases.

In the Davis case it seems to have been held that the test of the right of a litigant to amend his pleadings was whether the proposed amendment substantially changed the cause of action or defense and that, in the exercise of its discretion in granting or refusing an application to amend, the action of the court will not be reviewed on appeal unless it affirmatively appears that there was a plain abuse of such discretion to the manifest injury of some substantial right of the appellant.

In the Talbot case it was held that, under Section 102, Or. L., a new cause of action cannot be inserted by way of amendment on the trial or a different cause of action be substituted for the one sued on.

1. The rule deducible from these authorities, we think, is that at any stage of the proceeding the court, in the exercise of its judicial discretion, may permit any pleading to be amended if the amendment does not bring a new cause of action or suit or substitute another and different cause of action or suit for the one sued on or so substantially change the issues of the cause of action or suit as to take the other party by surprise as to matters of which he had no notice and could not be prepared to meet.

2-6. Loss or impairment of earning capacity arising from a physical injury, when shown to exist, has always been regarded as an element of damage in actions brought to recover for such injury. To be recoverable in the action, the loss or impairment must, of course, be alleged and, if shown to exist as a result of the injury complained of, it is a natural and necessary consequence of the injury and, as such, *588 is recoverable as general damag’es. It is settled law in this state that general damages are recoverable under proper averments in the complaint of plaintiff’s pecuniary loss without stating their particular nature: Dose v. Tooze, 37 Or. 13 (60 Pac. 380); Feeney & Bremer Co. v. Stone, 89 Or. 360, 379 (171 Pac. 569, 174 Pac. 152). Since general damages are the natural and necessary consequence of the wrong complained of, it is only necessary that the pleader should allege the result of the injury in a general way. The particulars in respect to which the plaintiff has suffered need not be pointed out. See 1 Chit. PI. 396; Bliss on Code Pleading (3 ed.), §§ 297a and 297b; 4 Sedgwick on Damages (9 ed.), § 1261.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 P. 600, 128 Or. 582, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-springer-or-1929.