Eggiman v. Young

490 P.2d 172, 260 Or. 261, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 305
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 490 P.2d 172 (Eggiman v. Young) 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
Eggiman v. Young, 490 P.2d 172, 260 Or. 261, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 305 (Or. 1971).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C. J.

This is an appeal from a jury verdict for defendant in an action for personal injuries resulting from an automobile accident.

Plaintiff, her husband, and her husband’s parents were passengers in an automobile driven by plaintiff’s husband, traveling east on Glen Echo road. The accident occurred at the intersection of Glen Echo road and Highway 99E in Clackamas county. Plaintiff was seated in the left rear, behind her husband. Her mother-in-law was in the right rear, and her father-in-law was in the right front. Plaintiff’s husband stopped at the stop sign on Glen Echo road, halting slightly forward of the stop sign in order to better observe traffic on Highway 99E. All occupants of plaintiff’s car looked for traffic and reported seeing none. Plaintiff’s husband, the driver, also saw no oncoming traffic. They proceeded easterly across 99E, a four-lane road, which is 87.6 feet wide at the point of the collision. They were struck in the right rear by defendant’s automobile just before clearing the far side of the highway.

*264 Defendant stated that he was traveling north on 99E at a speed of about 45 miles per hour. He testified that he first saw plaintiff’s vehicle as it was ahead and to his left, crossing the middle of the southbound lanes and some five or six car lengths, or 100 to 150 feet, ahead of him. Defendant stated that he immediately applied the brakes, skidded, and tried to swerve behind plaintiff’s car, but was unsuccessful. At the point of impact, defendant’s car was approximately astride the line dividing the two northbound lanes. The impact spun plaintiff’s car around, causing it to strike a car standing at the stop sign on the east side of Glen Echo road, heading west.

It was a clear, dry night, with no obstructions to visibility other than glare from the lights of business establishments along the highway. Highway 99E slopes down to the south of Glen Echo road so that defendant’s northbound car could not be seen at a point about 783 feet south of the intersection, nor could defendant have seen the intersection beyond that distance. Glen Echo road crosses 99E at a very slight angle, so that plaintiff’s car was headed very slightly northeast across the intersection, while defendant approached from the south. The posted speed on 99E at that point is 50 miles per hour.

Plaintiff alleged that defendant was negligent in failing to maintain proper lookout, speed and control. Defendant charged plaintiff with contributory negligence, claiming that she undertook to observe traffic and to direct the progress of the vehicle in which she was a passenger and failed to carry out such observa *265 tion and direction in a proper manner. These issues were submitted to the jury, which returned a general verdict for defendant. It is therefore impossible to determine whether the jury found defendant not negligent, or plaintiff eontributorily negligent.

There is little evidence of defendant’s negligence. Defendant’s testimony that his speed was about 45 miles per hour was undisputed and partly corroborated by a following driver. Several photographs of the damaged cars were introduced and an officer testified that defendant left a visible sldd mark 102 feet in length. There is nothing in this evidence which is inconsistent with defendant’s own testimony as to speed; thus, there is no evidence from which the jury could properly have drawn an inference of excessive speed. However, there was evidence from which the jury could have found that defendant failed to exercise proper lookout and control. This was not a case in which plaintiff’s vehicle suddenly appeared from concealment. Plaintiff’s car traveled from the far side of a four-lane road, across the center line and nearly to the other edge of the highway before impact. Defendant testified that he first saw the other vehicle as it was crossing the two southbound lanes, before it crossed the center line to his side of the road. From these facts the jury might have concluded that had *266 defendant exercised better lookout or proper control of his vehicle, he could have avoided the accident.

Since defendant’s freedom from negligence cannot be established as a matter of law, it becomes necessary to consider the alleged contributory negligence of plaintiff.

Plaintiff and her husband testified that all of the passengers of their ear helped advise the driver of oncoming traffic. On cross-examination, the husband testified as follows:

“Q. Of course, you were the driver but were the others observing?
“A. Yes.
“Q. And reporting to you?
“A. We played a little game. Ready on the left, ready on the right. We all helped one another.
“Q. And everybody participated?
“A. Yes.

Plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q. And was there any conversation between the passengers and the driver about it being all clear?
“A. Oh, yes, yes. We all looked and helped drive.
“Q. And you all did that on this occasion?
“A. Yes, I do it all the time.
“Q. And you said, ‘It’s all clear,’ is that about right?
“A. We saw nothing.”

In the circumstances of this case, the court properly instructed the jury that plaintiff, simply as a passenger in a vehicle driven by her husband, had no *267 duty to keep any lookout or to exert any control over the vehicle’s operation. However, defendant asserted that plaintiff had assumed such a duty and the court gave the following additional instructions defining plaintiff’s duty in this respect:

“However, I instruct you that where a passenger in a vehicle voluntarily or at the driver’s request voluntarily assumes and exercises part or all of the duty of keeping a lookout or maintaining control over the vehicle, and in so doing conveys to the driver his or her observation or direction based upon such lookout or control voluntarily exercised, then such voluntary lookout or control by the passenger must be exercised with the same degree of care that a reasonable and prudent person would exercise under the same or similar circumstances in volunteering such lookout or control.

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Related

Brawner v. Richardson
643 P.2d 1365 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1982)
Hoy v. Jackson
543 P.2d 1086 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1975)
Dickson v. Hollinger
496 P.2d 912 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 P.2d 172, 260 Or. 261, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggiman-v-young-or-1971.