Halsan v. Johnson

65 P.2d 661, 155 Or. 583, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 23
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 P.2d 661 (Halsan v. Johnson) 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
Halsan v. Johnson, 65 P.2d 661, 155 Or. 583, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 23 (Or. 1937).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

The plaintiff, Wallace Halsan, a minor, by S. J. Halsan, guardian ad litem, instituted this action against the defendant, Marie Johnson, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a collision between his sled and a truck owned by the defendant. From the order of the circuit court setting aside the judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury in favor of the defendant this appeal is taken.

The facts are substantially as follows: On January 20,1935, Wallace Halsan, aged thirteen years, five and one-half months, while coasting on a sled down hill on Tenth street in Astoria, collided at the intersection of Tenth and Exchange streets with a one and one-half ton Dodge truck owned by defendant and operated by her son. Snow had been on the ground for a week or more prior to that date and there had been general coasting on many of the Astoria hills, including the one on Tenth street, which at the time of the accident was covered with tracks of sled runners.

Tenth street runs in a northerly and southerly direction, and Exchange street runs in an easterly and westerly direction. The collision occurred at the north *585 west corner of the intersection, while defendant’s truck was being driven in a westerly direction, after plaintiff entered the intersection from the south. On the southeast corner of the intersection is the Walters apartment house, a three-story building flush with the sidewalk and extending southerly along Tenth street a distance of approximately one hundred feet, and easterly along Exchange street about sixty-five feet.

At the time of the mishap the defendant’s truck was being used in delivering milk to customers in the residential section of Astoria, and in addition to the driver carried two young men, who rode on the running board of the truck and assisted in delivering the milk. Immediately prior to the accident the truck had come almost to a stop in front of the Walters apartments, to permit delivery of milk in that building, after which it proceeded westerly along Exchange street in low gear, at the rate of four to six miles an hour.

After the truck had passed the center of the intersection on the northerly side of Exchange street and was near the northwest corner of the intersection, the sled with plaintiff on it, traveling at a speed estimated by some of the witnesses as high as twenty-five miles an hour, passed under the truck behind the front wheels, and plaintiff was struck by one of the rear wheels of the truck, sustaining injuries to his right hip and leg.

According to plaintiff’s own testimony, he observed the truck going in a westerly direction while he was approximately fifty feet south of the intersection and from seventy to eighty feet from the point where the collision occurred. He had started coasting at the intersection of Tenth street and Grand avenue, two blocks south of the intersection where the mishap *586 occurred, and had crossed Franklin avenne before seeing the truck. Between Grand and Franklin avenues the grade of the street’ is nineteen and one-half per cent, and from the latter avenue to Exchange street there is a twelve per cent grade. Plaintiff testified that the sled was moving too fast to be stopped, and shortly before entering the intersection of Tenth and Exchange streets he steered it sharply to the left, thinking that the truck would turn north on Tenth street and permit him to pass it on the left.

In the complaint the defendant is charged with being careless, reckless and negligent in the following particulars: (1) in permitting the truck to be driven by her son, alleged to have been “physically incapable and disabled” by having lost his right forearm so that he was then unable “to effect a quick emergency stop as the exigency of an emergency” might require; (2) in failing to have one of the two delivery boys who were riding on the running board sit next the driver of the truck in order to operate the emergency brake in case of need; (3) in not maintaining a proper and continuous lookout for boys sliding down Tenth street until after passing the intersection of that street with Exchange street, because of the obstruction of the view to the south by the apartment house; (4) in failing to stop the truck at the east line of Tenth street and in proceeding through the intersection, without first ascertaining whether or not it would be possible to cross said intersection with safety to boys sliding down the hill; (5) in failing to sound a horn or to give other timely warning of the approach of the truck before crossing the intersection; and (6) in driving the truck through the intersection “in a careless and heedless manner in wilful and wanton disregard of the rights and safety *587 of others including the plaintiff and without due caution and circumspection and in a manner so as to endanger or likely to endanger persons including this plaintiff.”

Two other charges of negligence were struck from the complaint on motion of the defendant. The first of these was that the defendant was guilty of negligence in employing Hiram Johnson, her son, as a chauffeur to operate the milk delivery truck when he was not licensed as a chauffeur, and the second charge was that defendant was careless and negligent in authorizing and permitting her son, who was not a licensed chauffeur, to operate the truck.

As grounds for a new trial the plaintiff specified as erroneous the action of the court (1) in striking from the complaint the two last mentioned charges of negligence; (2) in excluding proffered testimony of certain witnesses to the effect that they had, prior to the accident, coasted down Tenth street through the intersection with Exchange street; (3) in modifying two instructions requested by the plaintiff; (4) in giving-two of defendant’s requested instructions; and (5) in failing to withdraw from the jury the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence.

After the court had granted plaintiff’s request for a new trial the defendant filed a motion asking that the court specify the ground on which a new trial had been granted, which motion the court denied. The denial of this motion forms the basis of -one of the assignments of error urged by the appellant. When the court grants a new trial on its own motion, it is required in its order to specify the reasons for such action: § 2-807, Oregon Code Sup. 1935. However, when the order granting a new trial is based upon the motion of the unsuccessful litigant there is no such *588 specification or statement required by statute or rule of law. In Sawyer v. Hawthorne, 178 Iowa 407 (158 N. W. 665), after the trial court had granted the defendant’s motion for a new trial plaintiff moved that the court specify the grounds on which the order was made, which motion the court overruled. The appellate court held:

“Such a ruling is tantamount to saying that the order rested on all the grounds, for it can not be assumed that any court would deny a party all the advantages won in a trial without being willing on request to specify the precise grounds for its action.

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Bluebook (online)
65 P.2d 661, 155 Or. 583, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halsan-v-johnson-or-1937.