Lee v. Hoff

97 P.2d 715, 163 Or. 374, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 52
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 715 (Lee v. Hoff) 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
Lee v. Hoff, 97 P.2d 715, 163 Or. 374, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 52 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of the circuit court in favor of the two defendants, entered after a jury had returned a verdict in their favor. The plaintiff, who is the mother of Edwin Lee, deceased, and administratrix of that intestate’s estate, instituted this action in her representative capacity to recover the damages which the estate sustained when the son met death in a collision between an automobile driven by the defendant Carl Hoff and a motorcycle driven by the defendant Charles Kempthorm upon which the son was riding as a guest without pay. The collision occurred July 11, 1937, on the Coast highway near the point where the Wolf Creek highway enters that thoroughfare. Although both Hoff and Kempthorm are respondents, Kempthorm has submitted neither oral argument nor brief.

The complaint charges Hoff with negligence and Kempthorm with gross negligence. After alleging that each drove his vehicle without due caution and without maintaining a look-out it charges that Hoff (1) *378 entered upon the highway and crossed over its center line without giving a signal; (2) failed to yield the right of way to the motorcycle; and (3) drove from the right half to the left half of the roadway without ascertaining whether the movement could be made in safety. It charges that Kempthorm (1) failed “to dodge and go around” Hoff’s automobile; (2) failed to avoid collision with the automobile after he-saw it entering the highway; and (3) failed to cross over to the left side of the roadway after seeing that the car was upon the right half. The answers deny these averments. Hoff’s answer avers that Kempthorm was guilty of negligence in the operation'of his motorcycle and that plaintiff’s intestate, with knowledge of the negligence, failed to remonstrate. Kempthorm’s answer charges Hoff with negligent operation of the automobile.

The Coast highway at the place with which we are concerned is paved to a width of 18 feet and takes a course, roughly speaking, north and - south. The center of the pavement is marked with a yellow line. The Wolf Creek highway, where it enters the Coast highway, lies east and west. Adjacent to this intersection on the east side of the Coast highway and a few feet south of the Wolf Creek highway is a service station operated by one E. Limke. Across from the station is a picnic park privately owned; a road leads into it from the highway. Fourteen miles north of this place is the city of Seaside. For 835 feet south of the intersection the Coast highway is straight, level and unobstructed.

On the afternoon of July 11, 1937, the defendant Hoff, who had been driving northerly along the Coast highway toward Seaside, drove his car upon the Limke *379 service station grounds and asked for a drink of water. Limke told Mm that a fountain was in the park across the Mghway. For this brief conversation Hoff had stopped his car. Its left rear wheel was about ten or twelve feet from the edge of the pavement. The front left wheel was two or three feet nearer to the pavement’s edge. Hoff thought that the angle between the side of the car and the edge of the pavement was 45 degrees. Having received the information that drinking water was available across the road Hoff put Ms car into low gear and started across. Immediately ahead of his car on the opposite side of the highway was the road leading into the picnic grounds; that is,, it was directly ahead if the car proceeded on the 45-degree angle. Hoff swore positively that before putting his car into motion he looked south along the straight stretch of highway and saw no vehicle. Limke gave like testimony. Hoff then proceeded and entered upon the pavement at the angle of 45 degrees. In proceeding he did not vary his course — his purpose was to drive into the picnic ground road. It is agreed that he drove no faster than a walk. His car was in low gear. He gave no signal of any kind to indicate his intentions.

While the above incidents were taking place Kempthorm was driving his motorcycle’north on the Coast Mghway and was approaching the Wolf Creek junction. Lee, his friend, was seated immediately back of Mm as a nonpaying guest. Eight hundred and thirty-five feet south of the Limke station is a curve. When Kempthorm had rounded it he saw Hoff’s car standing at the service station and when he was 200 feet from the station observed that the car was starting. At this moment Lee called out, “Look out, that car is *380 starting.” Kempthorm at this moment, in order to improve his vision, raised his goggles and saw that the car was heading for the pavement at an angle which he (Kempthorm), as a witness, described as “about a 45-degree angle.” He swore that at that time he thought that the car after entering upon the right half of the pavement would change its course and proceed north toward Seaside. He then “turned back the gas and got ready to put my foot on the brakes if I needed it, I started slowing down, I started going across the yellow line so I could go around on the left-hand side so I could pass him.” He thought that his speed before he had lessened it was “around forty miles” per hour, and that after he had reduced the pressure upon the accelerator it was “around thirty or thirty-five miles an hour.” Up to this time Kempthorm had not inferred that Hoff intended to cross the pavement, but when he saw that the car did not right its course and turn north he applied the brake to the motorcycle’s rear wheel. The application of the brake left a skid mark 60 feet in length along the dry pavement, indicating, of course, that for that distance the rear wheel was locked. Kempthorm’s efforts failed to prevent a collision. The motorcycle crashed into the left side of the automobile causing the death of Lee.

Kempthorm at first was positive that the collision occurred on the left side of the highway while both vehicles were upon the pavement. However, when his attention was called to testimony which he gave upon a previous trial of this cause, he said, “I don’t know exactly, I would not say all of it (the automobile) was, I don’t know exactly.” He swore that the reason for the collision was Hoff’s omission to give a signal, explaining, “I didn’t know where he was going.”

*381 Hoff, besides swearing that he looked south along the course of the highway before entering and that he saw nothing, swore that when the motorcycle crashed into the left side of his car the latter was “about seven or eight feet from the highway down toward the park.” Chester Miller, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that the automobile’s “two front wheels were clear off of the pavement” when the motorcycle ran into its left side. W. M. Hollingsworth, another witness for the plaintiff, swore that the automobile “stopped with one wheel off the pavement and the left-hand rear wheel just ready to leave the pavement.” Limke, as a witness for the defendants, declared that he watched the motorcycle approach the car and that when the impact occurred “Hoff’s car was twelve feet off the pavement.” Mrs. Alma Collard, who saw the collision occur, thought that it took place “ten feet or more off the highway”. Donald Bodley, also a witness for the defendants, said that the automobile was “probably eight or ten feet at least” off the pavement when it was struck. Mrs. Hoff testified that the motorcycle hit their car when the latter’s rear wheels were four or five feet off the pavement.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 715, 163 Or. 374, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-hoff-or-1939.