Olson v. Chuck

259 P.2d 128, 199 Or. 90, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 248
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 259 P.2d 128 (Olson v. Chuck) 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
Olson v. Chuck, 259 P.2d 128, 199 Or. 90, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 248 (Or. 1953).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

*92 This cause is before us upon notices of appeal filed by the plaintiff from two judgments entered in this action. One of the judgments, in favor of the defendant-respondent William Gr. Ding, was rendered December 12, 1949; the other, in favor of the defendant-respondent Ben Morrow, bears as the date of its rendition June 5,1951. The notice of appeal from the judgment as to Ding states that it was entered after the court had sustained a demurrer filed by Ding and the plaintiff had pleaded no further as to that defendant. The demurrer charged that the complaint failed to state a cause of action against Ding. The judgment as to Morrow was based upon a verdict which the court had directed the jury to return in favor of that defendant. The plaintiff in the action, Agnes Olson, alleged in her complaint that she was injured upon a public sidewalk in front of premises owned by the defendant-respondent Ding and another defendant by the name of Fong, who was not served with process and who made no appearance. The complaint averred that the plaintiff’s fall was due to a defect in the sidewalk. Besides the defendants Ding, Fong and Morrow, there were six others who, according to the complaint, were lessees of the building which stood upon the lot to which the sidewalk abutted. Those six are not parties to this appeal. The aforementioned defendant-respondent Morrow is the city engineer of the city of Portland. Thus, it is seen that the defendants were the city engineer, the two owners of the lot and the six occupants of the structure which stands upon the lot. The only respondents are Ding (owner) and Morrow (city engineer). The city of Portland was not a defendant. The parties seemingly are in agreement that Noonan v. City of Portland, 161 *93 Or 213, 88 P2d 808, and the decisions cited in it precluded the possibility of holding the city liable for the plaintiff’s purported injury.

Plaintiff-appellant’s (Agnes Olson’s) brief submits as the first assignment of error the following:

“The court erred in sustaining defendant Ding’s demurrer to plaintiff’s amended complaint.”

That is the only assignment of error which attacks the judgment entered in favor of Ding. In considering that assignment of error, it must be remembered that the attacked judgment recites that after the court had sustained the demurrer, the plaintiff declined to plead .further. The exact words of the judgment are:

“It appearing to the Court that the demurrer of said defendant to plaintiff’s amended complaint was heretofore sustained by this Court and that plaintiff has failed to plead further herein against said defendant * *

Based upon that premise, judgment was rendered in favor of Ding.

It will be observed that the pleading to which the demurrer was sustained was the amended complaint. Omitting mention of facts of which we have already taken notice and of others that are immaterial to the issue before us, the pleading alleged that the six tenants to whom we have adverted, together with the defendant Pong and the defendant-respondent Ding, “constructed and maintained a cement sidewalk upon the land adjoining the street in front of said property, * * Continuing, the amended complaint alleged that April 29, 1948, the plaintiff, while walking upon the aforementioned sidewalk, fell when her heel “became caught *94 in a hole that was then and there in the sidewalk”. The pleading also averred:

“The said hole and uneven grade and weak condition in. said sidewalk were present and in existence for many months next preceding April 29, 1948,”

and

“defendants and each of them knew or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known said . facts.”

The amended complaint designated in appropriate manner Ordinance No. 75,971, § 5-309, of the city. Although the specifications of negligence against the defendant-respondent Ding are not of controlling importance upon this appeal, we now quote the following one:

“Defendants violated the aforesaid ordinance of the city of Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, in that they failed to maintain in good repair the sidewalk in front of said property and store building.”

To the amended complaint thus summarized the court sustained the demurrer filed by the respondent Ding upon the ground that the pleading stated no cause of action against him.

In seeking to support the attacked judgment order, counsel for Ding argue that we are not at liberty to determine whether or not the amended complaint stated a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff against him because, after the' order was entered which sustained the demurrer, the plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. They point out that a later pleading supersedes a former one and that thereupon the latter ceases to be a pleading. In view of that argument, it is necessary to return to the record and determine from it what, occurred’.

*95 Sometime after the entry of the order which sustained Ding’s demurrer to the complaint, the plaintiff filed a pleading which she entitled Second Amended Complaint. Its caption included Ding’s name, but the pleading contained nothing whatever pertaining to him. It was concerned only with the plaintiff’s cause of action against the defendant Morrow. It expanded and amended the charges which the amended complaint had made against that defendant. By the time it was filed, rulings had removed the tenants from the case. We said that the second amended complaint concerned itself exclusively with Morrow; for example, it alleged :

“It is and was the duty at all times hereinafter mentioned of the defendant Ben Morrow to * * *. That defendant Ben Morrow was so negligent, careless and acted in an unlawful manner as follows: * * * ??

At that point the pleadings set forth the specifications of the plaintiff’s charge of negligence against Morrow who was, as we have seen, the city engineer. Ding was left unmentioned, and it is plain that the second amended complaint did not purport to be the plaintiff’s medium of presenting her cause of action against him. As to the latter, she had evidently elected to stand upon her amended complaint.

Shortly after the second amended complaint was filed, the defendant Ding presented a motion which read:

“The defendant William G-. Ding moves .the Court for judgment herein upon the ground that the demurrer of this defendant to plaintiff’s amended complaint has heretofore been sustained by this Court and plaintiff has now filed a second amended complaint in which no actionable negligence, is *96 charged against this defendant and plaintiff has thus failed to plead further against this defendant.”

We direct attention to the words just quoted, “in which no actionable negligence is charged against this defendant and plaintiff has thus failed to plead further against this defendant”. In a preceding paragraph we copied the material part of the judgment order which sustained the motion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hayes Oyster Co. v. DEQ
504 P.3d 15 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)
BALBOA APARTMENTS v. Patrick
263 P.3d 1011 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2011)
Sims v. Besaw's Café
997 P.2d 201 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2000)
Papen v. Karpow
643 P.2d 375 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1982)
Brookwell v. Frakes
642 P.2d 1183 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1982)
Reynolds v. Port of Portland
571 P.2d 917 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1977)
Fitzwater v. Sunset Empire, Inc.
502 P.2d 214 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1972)
Marsh v. McLAUGHLIN ET UX
309 P.2d 188 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 P.2d 128, 199 Or. 90, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olson-v-chuck-or-1953.