Dewitt v. Sandy Market, Inc.

115 P.2d 184, 167 Or. 226, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 16
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 115 P.2d 184 (Dewitt v. Sandy Market, 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
Dewitt v. Sandy Market, Inc., 115 P.2d 184, 167 Or. 226, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 16 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is an action based on negligence to recover damages for personal injuries. The plaintiff, Gertrude S. DeWitt, was thrown to the pavement while walking across a street in the city of Portland, and *229 claims that she was run into by an automobile truck owned and operated by the defendant. The defendant denied on information and belief that the plaintiff came in contact with its truck at all, and alleged plaintiff’s contributory negligence, the act of a third party, and unavoidable accident as defenses. The jury found for the defendant, and on this appeal from the ensuing judgment the plaintiff assigns as error the refusal of the court to withdraw from the jury’s consideration each and all of the affirmative defenses and a ruling of the court excluding from the evidence a certain photograph offered by the plaintiff.

The accident occurred on February 10, 1940, at about 6:00 p. m. in or near a crosswall?; at the intersection of SB. 32nd Avenue and Division street. The former street runs north and south, the latter east and west. The intersection is not regular, the west curb of 32nd Avenue north of Division street being more than twenty-six feet west of the west curb of 32nd Avenue south of Division street. Hence, to go from the sidewalk at the northwest corner of the intersection to the sidewalk at the southwest corner one must proceed diagonally in a southeasterly direction. Division street is thirty-six feet wide, an arterial highway which usually carries heavy traffic. Eain was falling at the time of the accident, and it was dark enough to require motorists to have their lights on. Miss DeWitt, the plaintiff, met with her accident while crossing from the north to the south side of Division street on the west side of 32nd Avenue. She, the driver of a west-bound automobile, and the driver of an automobile which was following the defendant’s east-bound truck, were the only eyewitnesses to the occurrence. While the driver of defendant’s truck saw the plaintiff in the street, he testified that he knew nothing of an accident until *230 some time later. Owing to the nature of the questions presented it will be necessary to set out the testimony in some detail.

The plaintiff is a school teacher who was returning to her home at the end of the day. She was in good health and able to engage in outdoor exercise such as mountain climbing, but limped slightly in her right foot, a disability which she had had since birth. She lived on 30th Avenue, one block south of Division street, or about three blocks southwest of the place of the accident. She had come as far as Division street on a south bound bus, from which she alighted at the northwest corner of Division street and 32nd Avenue. She testified in substance as follows: Before undertaldng to cross Division street she looked, saw a car approaching from the east, and a line of traffic consisting of several cars approaching from the west. The west bound car was approximately a block away. She started to cross in the pedestrian crosswalk (which was not marked), but when she reached the center of the street stopped and turned toward the west, facing the oncoming traffic, and decided to wait for these cars to pass instead of crossing in front of them as she had intended, as they were nearer than she thought when she started to make the crossing. The second vehicle in this line of traffic was defendant’s truck. The lead car passed her, and, as she stood there sure that she was a safe distance from it, the defendant’s truck collided with her left shoulder and she knew nothing that happened after-wards. The truck was partly on the left-hand side of the street.

S. K. Elliott was the driver of the automobile following immediately behind the truck. He saw the plaintiff start across the street, “seemingly in the pedestrian *231 .lane, and it appeared as though she were walking straight across the street”. She seemed to pause in the center of the street. The west bound automobile passed her without hitting her — “you could definitely see space in between the car and the lady.” He estimated this space as a minimum of a foot. The truck was traveling slightly north of the center of the street. (There was no line painted on the street to mark the center.) In answer to the question “How close did she come to the truck, do you know that?”, he answered, “It looked as though she was right up against it”, and stated that “After the truck passed her she was falling in the direction directly towards me”. She was between six and eight feet in front of the witness’ car when he stopped. He was asked whether he could say definitely whether the truck struck her and answered, ‘ ‘ She was definitely against the side of the truck as it passed beyond a point of support for her”. He estimated the speed of the west bound car as twenty-five miles per hour and that of the truck about the same. We quote from his cross-examination:

“Q You think she fell, as you said, when the support of the Sandy truck passed she just dropped right there, did she ?
“A Well, now, that is pretty hard to say, whether she dropped immediately. She fell in my direction. Her head was closer to me than her feet, that is, and I think definitely the truck was supporting her right at that time from going over south. She would have gone further south had it not been—
• “Q (Interrupting) In other words, something was propelling her south, and you think the truck was supporting her?
“A No, I don’t say it was propelling her south, but had the truck not. been there at that point she would have fallen further • south,- • because she was against *232 the side of the truck there. As soon as the truck passed, the hack end of the truck passed, she was falling.
“Q In other words, where she had walked out in the street, like I am walking up here now, that is the point where she started falling?
“A No, she didn’t seem to fall right away. Her hands went up from her sides.
“Q Well, did she move or walk or—
“A I didn’t notice her moving at all there. Her hands flew out from her sides. The next view I had of her she was right against the back end of the truck and then started falling.”

Again, on cross-examination, he testified:

“Q And from the point where you were driving behind him, could you see the lady cross that street at all times?
“A I'saw her up to the point where she was between, — I thought — my first view was that it was going to be awfully close, that was my first impression.
“ Q In other words, close for the car that was going the opposite direction to you?
“A No, but there wasn’t going to be much space, and then I definitely saw that the coupe was clear of her and her hands were going up about that time, and then it was just a fractional part of a second until she was on the pavement.
“Q In other words, the car going west and the truck going east passed with the young lady between them?
“A

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 P.2d 184, 167 Or. 226, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewitt-v-sandy-market-inc-or-1941.