Noble v. Sears

257 P. 809, 122 Or. 162, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 150
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 257 P. 809 (Noble v. Sears) 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
Noble v. Sears, 257 P. 809, 122 Or. 162, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 150 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

COSHOW, J.

Defendant assigns six grounds of error in his appeal. The first three are treated together in defendant’s brief and will be disposed of in the same order in this opinion. The three assignments are that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant; in submitting the case to the jury, and in entering a judgment for plaintiff on the verdict. The bill of exceptions clearly discloses evidence tending to prove negligence on the part of defendant. Not only the plaintiff and her husband but a disinterested witness, who saw the defendant’s car approach and enter the intersection, testified that defendant entered the intersection at a speed in excess of five miles per hour and as he entered materially increased the speed of his car. The West Side Pacific Highway is a primary highway : Or. L. 1925, Chap. 104, § 2.

It has been so often determined by this court that the violation of a law is negligence that no elaboration is required to show that the testimony referred to tends to establish negligence on the part of defendant: Ramp v. Osborne, 115 Or. 672, 961 (239 *166 Pac. 112). This court cannot weigh the evidence but must accept the verdict of the jury, if there is any material evidence to support it. It thus appears clearly that it was not error for the learned judge to deny the motion for a directed verdict, or to submit the case to the jury, or to render judgment on the verdict, unless the evidence discloses as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which contributed to her own injury. The evidence does not disclose any such state of facts. It is not seriously contended by the defendant that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The facts, as related by both parties, disclose that the accident was the result of the three cars approaching the intersection almost simultaneously and 'there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff had control of the car in which she was riding or that she could have done anything to have avoided the accident. Defendant does not contend that plaintiff is responsible for her husband’s lack of judgment or for his neligence, unless she contributed to such negligence. The evidence does not justify this court in saying that plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law. Whether or not she was guilty of negligence was submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and the jury found in her favor. We are bound by that verdict.

The fourth assignment of error is based on the instruction of the court in the following language:

“This right of precedence at a crossing has no proper application except where the travelers, or vehicles on the intersecting highways approach the crossing so nearly at the same time and at such rate of speed, that if both proceed each without regard for the other, a collision or interference between them is reasonably to be apprehended. In such a *167 case it is the right of the one having the precedence to continue his course, and it is the duty of the other to yield him the right of way. But if a traveler not having such right of precedence comes to the crossing and finds no one approaching it upon the other highway within such distance as reasonably to indicate danger of interference or collision, he is under no obligation to stop or wait, but may proceed to use such crossing as a matter of right.”

This instruction was approved in Johnson v. Underwood, 102 Or. 680, 698 (203 Pac. 879). It was criticised in Ramp v. Osborne, 115 Or. 672, 702 (239 Pac. 112). It was criticised in the latter case, however, because it did not go far enough in that case. It did not require the plaintiff not having the right of way to look as the law required him to look or to take such precautions as the law enjoined upon him for his own protection. In the instant case the learned trial judge fully and repeatedly instructed the jury that the plaintiff and her husband were bound to exercise ordinary care in approaching the intersection and traversing the same. While the instruction under the authority of Ramp v. Osborne, above, if taken alone would be subject to criticism, when considered with its context it is not erroneous. In the immediate connection with that instruction he instructed the jury:

“If plaintiff’s husband is shown to have been negligent and his negligence, if any, was the sole cause of the injury to plaintiff, your verdict should be for the defendant, for the defendant would not be responsible for injuries produced solely by the negligence of the husband.”

He also instructed the jury:

*168 “The law imposed upon the plaintiff as a passenger in her husband’s automobile, the duty only of conducting herself as a reasonable prudent passenger riding with her husband would conduct herself in like circumstances, and if Mrs. Noble in her conduct in this case acted as a reasonably prudent wife riding with her husband would have acted in like circumstances, then she could not be held guilty of negligence, * * .”

Other instructions covered the same principle. The duty of the plaintiff to exercise the care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under the same circumstances was stressed in the charge to the jury so that there is no probability that the jury could have been misled because that duty on the part of plaintiff was not used in the sentence reading as follows:

“But if a traveler not having such right of precedence comes to the crossing and finds no one approaching it upon the other highway within such distance as reasonably to indicate danger of interference or collision, he is under no obligation to stop or wait, but may proceed to use such crossing as a matter of right.”

The fifth assignment of error is based upon the following instruction:

“If you should believe from a preponderance of the evidence herein that the defendant Sears was negligent in one or more respects as charged in the complaint, and that through no fault of the plaintiff or her husband, the plaintiff and her husband were confronted with sudden peril caused by the conduct of the defendant, and by reason thereof their judgment was clouded and they did not do just as they might have done had their judgment been not so clouded, they cannot be held responsible in such cir *169 cumstances for an. error in judgment, if any, even though they did the wrong thing in trying to save themselves and avoid accidents.”

Defendant attacks this instruction on two grounds. First, he claims that the undisputed facts show conclusively that no emergency in fact existed, or if there was in fact an emergency, it was brought about by the negligent acts of the plaintiff’s husband and not by the acts of the defendant. Second, the instructions given did not embody a correct statement of the emergency rule in that it casts no duty upon the plaintiff to make such a choice as a person of ordinary prudence placed in such a position might make. Whether or not there was an emergency is a question of fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P. 809, 122 Or. 162, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noble-v-sears-or-1927.