Fenton v. Aleshire

393 P.2d 217, 238 Or. 24, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 415
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 393 P.2d 217 (Fenton v. Aleshire) 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
Fenton v. Aleshire, 393 P.2d 217, 238 Or. 24, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 415 (Or. 1964).

Opinions

LUSK, J.

On October 27, 1961, Claudia Fenton, a girl eight years of age, was struck by an automobile driven by the defendant, Ronald L. Aleshire, and owned by the [26]*26defendant William A. Sahel. She sustained injuries which resulted in her death. In an action brought by the administrator of the young girl’s estate to recover damages for wrongful death, the jury returned a verdict for the defendants. Thereafter the court, on motion of the plaintiff, entered an order setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial. This appeal is from that order.

The accident occurred a short time after five o’clock in the afternoon; it was raining hard, it was dark, and visibility was poor. Automobiles were being driven with their lights on. The defendant was driving in an easterly direction on Southwest Parkway in a suburb of Portland. Southwest Parkway is intersected in irregular fashion by Southwest Tremont on the north, and Southwest Edgewood on the south. At the southeast corner of this intersection are the building and playground of a public school. On the Southwest Parkway side the playground is elevated a few feet above the level of the street.

The defendant Aleshire, according to his testimony, was driving at a speed of fifteen to twenty miles per hour, and had passed through this intersection when he saw the decedent, apparently coming from the playground, about four feet from the right side of his car. Aleshire testified:

“Well, I saw her running off the bank and just like that she was in front of me, and I turned away to the right, trying to miss her, and I hit the brakes at the same time; when the car hit her, she spun off to the left. ”

Aleshire further testified that the little girl was looking towards the east as she ran, that is, in the direction away from his car, and that she was struck by the left front headlight of the car.

[27]*27The court assigned the following grounds for its order granting a new trial:

“1. The court erred in instructing the jury on unavoidable accidents.
“2. The court erred in instructing the jury on sudden emergency.
“3. The court erred in allowing defense counsel to argue statements of law to the jury which in the court’s opinion were not applicable and could well have been misleading.
“4. The court erred in instructing the jury on negligence per se without limiting such instruction to the defendants.”

We will consider first the third ground, improper argument to the jury. The italicized language in the following portion of the closing argument of counsel for the defendants is the basis of the ruling:

“* * * Mr. Schwab [counsel for the plaintiff] and I, we are again on a point of agreement, I agree with him that it is the law that in the event you should not accept our theory of the case, that damages would be for the net value of her estate at the time of her death, I mean, assuming that she lived out her life expectancy, there can be no compensation for counsel [sic] to console the parents or for their grief or any pain or any suffering of the deceased, and there’s a reason for that rule and one reason being that the parents are given by statute another lawsuit, that they may bring the lawsuit for the loss of services of the child, and so, out of an accident where there’s some fault, there can be in fact usually two lawsuits, one brought by the estate for pecuniary loss, assuming she had lived, and the other, the loss of services by the parents. Now, I don’t know who is to say what we are to assume by a child that’s eight years old, and assume what they would have saved had they lived another 60 years. People be[28]*28come ill, they have a fatal accident, they get married and never work, and never save, others are very frugal, they don’t get married and they do save and they work very hard and they pay it out all in taxes, clothes, and so to me it is the worst kind of an assumption and one that I will not indulge in, and I feel if the matter gets to that point, and I hope it doesn’t, but if it does, that your assumptions surely will be as valid as any that I could make or any that Mr. Schwab could make.”

Before the final arguments, counsel for defendants had informed the court that he intended to argue the italicized matter to the jury. Counsel for plaintiff objected and the court, without deciding the question, warned counsel for the defendants that it might constitute error, and allowed the plaintiff, in advance, an exception to such argument, if it should be made, so as to avoid the necessity of an interruption during the argument.

We agree with the court below that permitting the argument was error. Whether the parents of the deceased child had a cause of action for loss of services was wholly irrelevant to the issues for the determination of the jury: negligence of the defendant; contributory negligence of the deceased; proximate cause and damages.

That the statement was prejudicial we have no doubt. Made, as it was, in connection with counsel’s argument as to the speculative nature of the claim for damages in a death case involving the death of an eight year old child, its natural tendency was to plant in the jury’s mind the idea that they should allow no damages because the parents might recover in a different lawsuit brought for the loss of their child’s services. We do not impute to counsel for the defend[29]*29ants a bad’motive,, but tbe best intentions could not neutralize the harmful effect of what he said. An argument of this kind can be just as prejudicial to a plaintiff as the wrongful injection of insurance into the trial can be to a defendant.

Hubbard v. Lamford Lbr. Co., Inc., 209 Or 145, 150-151, 304 P2d 943, relied on by the defendants is not controlling. There we affirmed the ruling of the trial court which sustained an objection to an improper argument to the jury on damages by counsel for the plaintiff and observed that in any event the ruling was not reversible because the verdict was for the defendant. "Whatever may have been the propriety of the dictum in the context of that case, here we are dealing with an improper argument which, for all we know, may well have influenced the jury to find that, regardless of the questions of negligence and contributory negligence, no damages under the rule peculiar to such cases as this had been established by the evidence.

The defendants suggest that the point was waived by failure of the plaintiff to object at the time the argument was made. It is true that in Nielsen v. Brown, 232 Or 426, 430 374 P2d 896, we indicated that the trial judge is not required to rule on a hypothetical state of affairs. But this is an appeal from an order granting a new trial for prejudicial error. In such a case it is immaterial on review whether a proper objection or any objection was made, Strandholm v. General Const. Co., 235 Or 145, 152, 382 P2d 843.

The court did not err in instructing the jury on sudden emergency. The emergency doctrine, as applied in automobile accident eases, was thus stated [30]*30by Mr. Justice Beand in Frangos v. Edmunds, 179 Or 577, 607, 173 P2d 596:

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Bluebook (online)
393 P.2d 217, 238 Or. 24, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenton-v-aleshire-or-1964.