O'Brien v. Dunigan

210 P.2d 567, 187 Or. 227, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 193
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 567 (O'Brien v. Dunigan) 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
O'Brien v. Dunigan, 210 P.2d 567, 187 Or. 227, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 193 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

*229 ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment in favor of the three defendants. The action which terminated in the attacked judgment was predicated upon averments that an automobile operated by the defendants negligently collided with one owned by the plaintiff, thereby injuring the plaintiff in person and property. The complaint assumed the form of two counts, but the averments of negligence were the same in each. The first count sought damages for injury to property (automobile); the second, for injury to person.

The defendants are Loren Dunigan, operator of the ear which the complaint terms the defendants’, Arlie Skiller, owner of the car, and Mrs. Arlie Skiller, an occupant of the car at the time of the mishap.

The judgment in favor of the defendant, Mrs. Skiller, as to both causes of action, is based upon an order of involuntary nonsuit which was entered at the close of plaintiff’s case. The judgment in favor of the *230 defendants, Arlie Skiller and Loran Dunigan, as to the first cause of action, is based upon orders of involuntary nonsuit which were entered at the close of of plaintiff’s case. The judgment in favor of those two defendants, as to the second cause of action, is based upon the verdict of a jury.

The collision occurred December 14, 1945, at about 7:15 a. m., two miles northeast of Salem upon the Salem-Silverton highway. At the time of the impact, the car, of which the plaintiff claims ownership, was standing still and was facing southwest, that is, toward Salem. It was struck in the rear by the car driven by defendant Dunigan, who was also proceeding toward Salem.

The parties agree that at the hour of the impact the air was foggy and so cold that frost formed upon windshields. The sun rose that morning at 7:21. Due to the fact that his windshield had become frosty, the plaintiff stopped his car at the place we mentioned and was engaged in removing frost when the defendants’ car approaching from the rear collied with it. The pavement is 21 feet wide and upon its two sides are gravel shoulders five or six feet wide.

The plaintiff presents four assignments of error. The first challenges three rulings which may be summarized as follows: (a) the first ruling sustained the defendants’ objection to the receipt of evidence of a title certificate which described the automobile of which the plaintiff claims ownership; (b) the second sustained the defendants’ objection to the receipt in evidence of a paper which the plaintiff terms “a vehicle registration slip”; and (c) the third sustained the defendants’ motion for an involuntary nonsuit upon the first cause of action.

*231 The second assignment of error is based upon rulings which sustained objections made by the defendants to the following questions which plaintiff’s counsel propounded to witness L. H. Meyer:

“Q. About how fast in miles per hour would you say that' the Ford convertible coupe was going?”
“Q. When this car passed you, did you make any comment to your daughter?”

We explain that “the Ford convertible coupe” mentioned in the first question and “this car [that] passed you,” mentioned in the second, were one and the same car. The plaintiff claims that that car was the one which Dunigan was driving, and that Mr. Meyer saw it about five miles before it struck the one from which the plaintiff was removing frost.

The third assignment of error is based upon a contention that error was committed when the trial judge, after both parties had rested, refused to vacate the previous order of involuntary nonsuit favorable to the defendant, Mrs. Arlie Skiller, which he had entered at the close of the plaintiff’s case.

The fourth assignment of error is based upon instructions given by the trial judge to the jury which, as epitomized in the plaintiff’s brief, read as follows:

“If you find that plaintiff * * * parked his automobile upon the paved portion of the * * * highway at the time of the collision when it was practicable for the plaintiff to have parked his automobile off the paved portion of the * * * said highways, plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law, * * *. If you find that plaintiff at the time and place of collision * * * parked his automobile upon the * * * highway without leaving a clear and unobstructed width of not less than sixteen feet on the main portion of * * * *232 highway opposite the said parked vehicle, plaintiff was negligent as a matter of law * * V’

Plaintiff’s exception to the instruction was expressed as follows:

“Plaintiff also excepts to that part of the Court’s instructions and to each place where the Court referred to the parking of an automobile at any time during the period of this controversy for the reason that the evidence and all of the evidence shows that the placing or parking of the automobile was the result of an emergency stop, and that at no time was it parked.”

Before considering assignments of error I and III, we shall consider II and IY.

Mr. L. H. Meyer, mentioned in assignment of error II, was a passenger in an automobile which his daughter was driving toward Salem. The Meyer car was proceeding in the same direction as the defendants’. According to Mr. Meyer, “approximately five miles back” from the place where the plaintiff’s car was struck by the defendants’, the Meyer car was overtaken by a Ford convertible coupe. He swore that he saw no other Ford convertible coupe upon the road. The car owned by defendant Arlie Skiller was a Ford convertible coupe and, based upon the facts we have mentioned, the plaintiff contends that the car which passed the Meyer car must have been the one which struck the one of which he (plaintiff) claims ownership. It will be recalled that one of the questions which plaintiff’s counsel submitted to Mr. Meyer inquired for the rate of speed of the passing vehicle and that the other one asked whether the witness made “any comment” to his daughter when the passing occurred. Notwithstanding the fact that the defendants’ counsel made an objection to the second question, *233 as he had also to the first one, the witness, before the ruling was made, replied, “I did.” After that answer, the objection was sustained and plaintiff’s counsel proceeded no further with this line of inquiry. Thus, the second question was fully answered, but in view of the manner in which counsel presented the case, we will assume that plaintiff’s counsel went on and asked the witness to repeat the “comment.”

No offer of proof was made after the objections to the first question was sustained, and likewise none was made after the objections were sustained to the question which asked the witness to repeat the comment. The plaintiff failed to indicate in any way the answers which the witness would have made had he been permitted to answer the questions. The latter do not suggest the information which plaintiff’s counsel presumably expected to receive from this witness.

Section 1-1011, O. C. L. A., says:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 567, 187 Or. 227, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-dunigan-or-1949.