Deniff v. Charles R. McCormick & Co.

210 P. 703, 105 Or. 697, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 99
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 210 P. 703 (Deniff v. Charles R. McCormick & Co.) 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
Deniff v. Charles R. McCormick & Co., 210 P. 703, 105 Or. 697, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 99 (Or. 1922).

Opinion

MoCOURT, J.

This is an action brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff while she was traveling as a passenger on the steamship “Willamette,” from San Francisco to Portland. The cause being at issue upon all the material averments of plaintiff’s complaint, a jury trial was had, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered. Defendant appeals.

Defendant assigns numerous errors, the most important of which relate to the denial of defendant’s motion for a judgment of nonsuit against plaintiff, and to the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for defendant.

Plaintiff alleged that while she was traveling as a passenger on the steamer “Willamette,” she undertook to sit down upon a steamer chair on the deck of the vessel; that as a result of the negligence of defendant, ’ the chair gave way and threw her to the deck, causing the injuries and ensuing damages of which she complains. Plaintiff’s proof of negligence, and injury and damage caused thereby, was sufficient for submission to the jury.

Plaintiff also alleged in her complaint that the defendant was the beneficial owner or operator of the steamship “Willamette” at the time plaintiff was a passenger thereon and received the injuries of which she complains. Plaintiff’s evidence disclosed that defendant was not the owner of the vessel, and the trial court took from the jury the question of defendant’s ownership, but permitted the case to go to the jury on the allegation in plaintiff’s complaint, denied by defendant, that defendant was the operator of [700]*700the vessel at the time plaintiff alleges she was injured.

Defendant earnestly insists that plaintiff furnished no competent evidence to establish that issue, and consequently defendant’s motion for a judgment of nonsuit should have been allowed. Defendant also insists that the evidence introduced by defendant not only did not aid the evidence of the plaintiff upon the question of the identity of the operator of the vessel, but clearly established that defendant was not such operator, and that therefore it was error for the court to refuse to direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendant.

To sustain the allegation of the complaint that plaintiff was a passenger upon the steamship “Willamette,” plaintiff introduced in evidence a passenger check, part of a ticket which was obtained at her request by her daughter from some office in San Francisco, and entitled the holder thereof to passage upon the steamship “Willamette” from San Francisco to Portland. Plaintiff testified that she did not know where her daughter obtained the ticket. At the top of the passenger check appear the words, “McCormick Steamship Line,” and below this the words, “Steamer Willamette. Sailing Jan. 21, 1919.” On the back is stamped the words, “West Coast S. S. Line. Jan. 20, 1919. Market St. S. F. Cal.”

Upon arriving at Portland, plaintiff left the vessel and proceeded to an office to which she had been directed by someone on board the steamer “Willamette,” as the office of the company that operated the boat. She understood it was the office of the Parr-McCormick Steamship Company. Later in the day her daughter, to whose home she had gone, called the office of the Parr-McCormick Steamship Com • [701]*701pany "by telephone, and complained that plaintiff was injured.

Plaintiff also introduced in evidence the letterhead of the defendant, which was in use by it at the time of writing a letter on May 10, 1919, nearly four months after the occurrence of plaintiff’s alleged injury. Upon that letter-head is the following printed matter:

“Steamers Chas. R. McCormick & Main office
Klamath Wholesale Lumber Eife Bldg., San
Willamette Manufacturers and Cargo’ Eraneisco
Multnomah Shippers Los Angeles office
Celilo 912-13-14 Yeon Bldg. 533-5 Van Nuys
Wapama Portland, Oregon. Bldg.
Wahkeena Mills and
Ernest H. Meyer Plant at
Motorships St. Helens, Oregon
City of Portland Yards at
S. I. Allard San Cal.
City of St. Helens” E. H. Meyer, Manager
Portland Offiee.

The above-mentioned letter-head was identified by E. H. Meyer, manager of defendant, called as a witness by plaintiff, who testified in response to questions asked by a juror, that defendant was not the owner of the steamship “"Willamette”; that defendant had never operated the boat for profit, and was not so operating it at the time of the injury to plaintiff. The witness also stated: “We load the boat.”

The foregoing was all the evidence offered by plaintiff in her case in chief, to establish the identity of the operator of the boat, or to connect defendant with its operation.

Having established that defendant was not the owner of the vessel, plaintiff, in order to make a case sufficient for submission to the jury, was required to furnish evidence that defendant was operating the steamship “Willamette” at the time plaintiff was injured. Plaintiff insists that this requirement was met by proof that three and one-half months after the [702]*702voyage in question, defendant was using the letterhead above set forth.

Plaintiff claims that the name “McCormick” appearing prominently both upon the ticket and in the corporate name of defendant, together with the letter-head containing a list of vessels, which included the steamship “Willamette,” authorized the jury to infer that defendant was operating the vessel at the time plaintiff was injured.

No direct evidence was offered to show that the vessel was in the possession of the defendant. The evidence fails to connect defendant with the passem ger check, or the ticket of which it was a part. If it had any tendency to identify the operator of the vessel, the name “McCormick” appearing upon the passenger check, when considered with the evidence that plaintiff on leaving the vessel, entered an office having some connection with the steamship “Willamette,” which she understood to be the office of the Parr-McCormick Steamship Company, and that plaintiff later called that company by telephone concerning the injuries received by her while a passenger upon the “Willamette,” points to the latter company, and not the defendant, as such operator. It follows that the probative force of the letter-head is not aided by the passenger check.

Before the letter-head can be regarded as an item of evidence in support of plaintiff’s case, it is necessary to give such letter-head a retrospective effect, contrary to the general rule that presumptions do not run backward: 22 C. J. 92.

Assuming, without deciding, that the circumstances of this case except the letter-head from that general rule, we proceed to consider its value as evidence, according to it the utmost weight permissible. The letter-head contains nothing to indicate that defend[703]

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Bluebook (online)
210 P. 703, 105 Or. 697, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deniff-v-charles-r-mccormick-co-or-1922.