Gantenbein v. Huckleberry

315 P.2d 792, 211 Or. 605
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 315 P.2d 792 (Gantenbein v. Huckleberry) 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
Gantenbein v. Huckleberry, 315 P.2d 792, 211 Or. 605 (Or. 1957).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Mae Huckleberry, from a judgment in the sum of $10,000 which the circuit court entered in favor of the plaintiff after the jury had returned its verdict. The action which terminated in the entry of the challenged judgment arose out of a collision of an automobile, operated by defendant Mae Huckleberry, in which the plaintiff was riding as a nonpaying guest, and a truck driven by the other defendant, Richard Patterson. The complaint averred that defendant Mae Huckleberry operated her automobile in a reckless and grossly negligent manner. Judgment was entered in favor of defendant Richard Patterson after the court had sustained his motion for an involuntary nonsuit. No appeal was taken from that judgment.

We will hereafter speak of the plaintiff-respondent as the plaintiff and of defendant-appellant Mae Huckleberry as the defendant. The latter presents three assignments of error. The first charges that the circuit court erred when it overruled the defendant’s motion for an order of involuntary nonsuit. The second and third are based upon instructions which the defendant *607 requested but which the court declined to give. We will now consider the first assignment of error.

The aforementioned collision occurred in the intersection of TJ. S. Highway 101 and a thoroughfare known as Columbia Beach road. TJ. S. Highway 101, to which we will hereafter refer as the highway, pursues a northerly-southerly direction. Columbia Beach road abuts upon the highway from the west but does not intersect it. For one who drives north on the highway, Columbia Beach road lies to his left and takes a northwesterly direction; therefore, a driver who is proceeding north, as the defendant was doing, and who wishes to turn into Columbia Beach road, as the defendant was asked to do, must make a left-hand turn from the highway into the road. He need not, however, make a turn of 90 degrees. The road leads from the highway at an angle of 45 degrees.

April 7,1953, the plaintiff, the defendant and others had attended a flower show in Pacific Grange hall which is located on the highway. After lunch, mention was made of an attractive array of azaleas at the home of a Mrs. Feiselman on Columbia Beach road, and thereupon the defendant invited four of those present, including the plaintiff, to accompany her in her automobile to the Feiselman home. The hour was about 2:30 p. m. As the party entered the defendant’s automobile, Mrs. G-antenbein, the plaintiff in this action, took her position in the rear seat on the right-hand side. The defendant did not know the location of Columbia Beach road and was, therefore, compelled to rely upon her passengers to give the needed directions. The plaintiff was familiar with Columbia Beach road, as was also Mrs. Ann Lewis, who seated herself in the front seat to the right of the defendant.

As the automobile proceeded north on the highway *608 it fell into a line of cars a mile long, which included three or four loaded log trucks. Its place in the line of cars was immediately behind a loaded log truck. The long procession of cars seemingly did not vary its speed. The lowest estimate of speed was 20 to 25 miles per hour and the highest was 30 to 35. The space between the defendant’s car and the truck ahead of it was variously estimated as very close, 20 feet, and two car lengths. The defendant’s speed was not above that of the other cars, and the distance between her car and the truck in front of her was not significantly less than the distance between the others cars in the line. A witness for the plaintiff, Frederick Sauer, whose car was the third behind the defendant, gave the following testimony:

“Q When you came up there, Mr. Sauer, were you and the two cars ahead of you and the Huckleberry car and the loaded logging truck going, more or less all going about the same rate of speed?
“A Tes.
“Q About how fast was that?
“A Well, I doubt if she was traveling more than between 20 and 25 miles an hour.”

As the cars moved ahead in the manner just indicated, none of the guests criticized the defendant’s operation of her car. WThen the defendant’s counsel sought to develop that fact further by cross-examining one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, the trial judge, in sustaining an objection made by the plaintiff, declared: “No one has criticized her driving up to the time she drew up close to the logging truck and turned.”

When the defendant’s car arrived at the point on the highway where Columbia Beach road enters, one or more of the passengers exclaimed “This is it” or “Here is where you turn.” Thereupon the defendant made a sharp, abrupt left turn without slackening *609 speed. At that instant an empty log truck driven by the defendant, Richard Patterson, was proceeding south on the highway at a speed of about 40 miles per hour. The Patterson truck struck the defendant’s car at its center post, and the plaintiff thereby suffered the injuries for which she seeks redress in this action. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses, in describing the place where the plaintiff’s car was struck, said: “The greatest damage was right in, at the rear door and the door post, between the two doors.”

The hard-surfaced pavement of the highway is 23 feet wide. A yellow line marks its center and divides the pavement into two strips, one for north-bound traffic and the other for vehicles moving in the opposite direction. On each side of the pavement there is a broad graveled shoulder. Thus each lane of the pavement is 11 y2 feet broad. The loaded log truck, which was immediately in front of the defendant, was not more than eight feet wide. Accordingly, there was at least 3 y2 feet of the lane which the truck did not occupy. One of the witnesses testified, “I don’t think the truck driver was crowding the yellow line,” and the defendant swore that the truck driver “was well over to the right of the highway.” No other witness gave testimony upon that subject. Prom these facts it appears that, as the defendant was following the truck, she could see for some distance into the lane in which southbound vehicles were moving. The defendant estimated that she could see ahead in the left lane at least 200 feet.

One of the witnesses testified that after the party had entered the car, the defendant declared that, in view of the fact that she did not know the way to the Peiselman home, “You girls will have to show me where to go.” The defendant testified that the exclama *610 tions “Here is where you turn” were made “all of a sudden” and when “we were opposite this road.” She swore that at that time the Patterson truck was “about three car lengths away.” Others who testified thought that the Patterson truck was very close to the defendant when she turned and that a collision was inevitable.

The record does not indicate whether or not the defendant was aware of the fact that Columbia Beach road entered the highway from the left and that she would, therefore, be required to make a left turn when she reached the intersection. The only occupants of the car [the plaintiff and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
315 P.2d 792, 211 Or. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gantenbein-v-huckleberry-or-1957.