Holzhauser v. Portland Traction Co.

169 P.2d 127, 178 Or. 607, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 144
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 127 (Holzhauser v. Portland Traction Co.) 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
Holzhauser v. Portland Traction Co., 169 P.2d 127, 178 Or. 607, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 144 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This action was instituted by Charles Holzhauser, as administrator of the estate of Alice M. *609 LaVigne, deceased, against defendants, Portland Traction Company, a corporation, and William L. LaVigne, to recover damages for the death of his decedent, alleged to have been caused by defendants’ negligence in a collision between a trackless trolley bus, owned and operated by defendant corporation, and an automobile, owned and operated by defendant LaVigne, in which decedent was riding as a guest. From a judgment in favor of the defendants) plaintiff has appealed.

The accident occurred on North Greeley avenue in the city of Portland, a few feet north of the intersection of that avenue with North Alberta street. This avenue extends generally northwesterly and southeasterly, sloping slightly to the southeast, with a paved surface of 27' 6" in width. The middle of the pavement was marked with a yellow line dividing it into two lanes of traffic. It is one of Portland’s heavily traveled thoroughfares.

A few minutes before 5 o’clock in the afternoon on January 18, 1943, defendant LaVigne was driving his Dodge automobile in a northerly direction on North Greeley avenue. In the front seat and to his right was his mother, the decedent, and in the rear were his father and uncle. As the LaVigne car approached the place of the accident, it crossed the center line in the highway into the left or west lane and traveled for some distance in that lane. A trolley bus was proceeding downgrade in a southeasterly direction and in the west lane of traffic when the operator thereof, according to his testimony, saw the LaVigne car cross into his lane of traffic about 100 to 150 feet in front of the trolley bus." Neither the bus nor the automobile was then traveling more than 25 miles an hour. The operator of the bus immediately “started slowiupdown” and, in an attempt to avoid a collision with *610 the automobile, steered the bus to his left. At about the same time the automobile swerved suddenly to its right and collided head on with the trolley bus, a few feet east of the center line of the avenue. Mrs. LaVigne died as a result of the injuries received in this accident.

Three assignments of error are presented by the plaintiff, all of which are based upon instructions given by the court. The first two instructions apply only to the defendant Traction Company and the third instruction to the defendant LaVigne.

The first assignment relates to an instruction' on contributory negligence on the part of the decedent, Alice M. LaVigne. It was excepted to by plaintiff on the ground that there was no evidence in the case that Mrs. LaVigne was guilty of contributory negligence. The answer of the Traction Company alleged contributory negligence on her part and no question is raised here as to the sufficiency of that pleading.

There was evidence introduced that defendant LaVigne ’s automobile traveled for a block and one-half to two blocks on the wrong or west side of the avenue immediately preceding the collision; that during that time all four of the occupants of the car were looking to their left at a disabled tanker in the Willamette river, and that Mrs. LaVigne knew the automobile in which she was riding was on the wrong side of the highway and that she saw the trolley bus approaching from the opposite direction. The record fails to disclose that she did anything to protect herself from tbe impending danger.

Mrs. LaVigne, a guest passenger, was not chargeable with the negligence of her son in the management of the Lodge automobile. 4 Blashfield, Cyclo *611 pedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Perm. Ed., § 2491, p. 291; Gilman v. Olson, 125 Or. 1, 265 P. 439. She, however, had a duty to exercise ordinary care for her own safety, and if she failed to do so, plaintiff can not prevail. Blashfield, id., § 2391, p. 186; Whiting v. Andrus, 173 Or. 133, 144 P. (2d) 501; Koski v. Anderson, 157 Or. 349, 71 P. (2d) 1009; Layman v. Heard, 156 Or. 94, 66 P. (2d) 492. She knew that her son was on the wrong side of the highway and she knew of the approaching trolley bus. It is said in Whiting v. Andrus, supra, that “if a guest passenger is aware that the driver of the car ‘is carelessly rushing into danger’, ordinary care for his own safety may require that he should take appropriate measures to protect himself.” And in Lawrence v. Troy, 133 Or. 196, 289 P. 491, the court, after ruling that under the facts there involved, plaintiff, a guest passenger, was not required to keep a watch on the road or to do “back seat driving”, observed that “if any danger had come to her notice and she had realized its existence, it would have been proper for her to warn the driver, if she had time to do so before the accident.” See also Koski v. Anderson, supra; Layman v. Heard, supra.

Whether Mrs. LaVigne exercised ordinary care to protect herself, after she became aware of her peril, is to be tested by what a reasonably prudent man, under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, Would have done to insure his own safety. Krause v. Southern Pacific Co., 135 Or. 310, 295 P. 966; Koski v. Anderson, supra. The question of whether a guest passenger is guilty of contributory negligence is usually one to be determined by the jury. Whiting v. Andrus, supra; Krause v. Southern Pacific Co., supra. No error was committed by the trial court in submitting that question to the jury inasmuch as more than one reason *612 able deduction may be drawn from the evidence in the case.

The second assignment of error is based upon the giving of the following instruction; “If you find that the accident was unavoidable as far as the bus driver was concerned, you will return your verdict in favor of the defendant Portland Traction Company.” The plaintiff asserts that this instruction is erroneous on the ground “that the evidence affirmatively shows that the bus driver could have avoided the accident”. Immediately prior to giving this instruction the court told the jury:

“ * * * that if the driver of the bus was acting in an emergency not created by any fault or neglect on his part, he was not required to exercise the same degree of care and caution that would be exercised by a reasonably prudent person not acting in an emergency. If, under the conditions disclosed by the evidence, the driver of the bus exercised that degree of care which would have been exercised by a reasonably prudent person acting in an emergency not created by his own negligence, then you will return your verdict in favor of the defendant Portland Traction Company.”

In Hanks v. Norby, 152 Or. 610, 54 P. (2d) 836, it is stated that the use of the term “unavoidable accident” has been recognized and approved by this court “as meaning an accident not resulting from the negligence of defendant.” Citing numerous cases. See also Murphy v. Read, 157 Or. 487, 72 P. (2d) 935; DeWitt v. Sandy Market, Inc., 167 Or. 226, 240, 115 P. (2d) 184. And in McVay v. Byars, 171 Or. 449, 458, 138 P.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 127, 178 Or. 607, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holzhauser-v-portland-traction-co-or-1946.