Openshaw v. Adams

445 P.2d 663, 92 Idaho 488, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 322
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1968
Docket10033
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 445 P.2d 663 (Openshaw v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Openshaw v. Adams, 445 P.2d 663, 92 Idaho 488, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 322 (Idaho 1968).

Opinion

McQUADE, Justice.

Action for damages resulting from an automobile collision. Gordon Adams was driving a pickup truck which collided at an intersection on Idaho State Highway 25 between Wendell and Hagerman with a car in which the four appellants were riding; respondent Marine Adams, Gordon’s wife, was driving a car about twenty-five yards behind Gordon’s truck at the time of the accident. Appellants brought their action against both Adamses: Gordon, for allegedly running a stop sign and for failure to look ahead; Marine, for allegedly honking her car’s horn in a gesture of greeting to Gordon just before the collision, thereby distracting him. The action was tried to a jury which returned a verdict against Gordon, for (combined total) about $100,000.00, and for Marine. This is an appeal from that part of the judgment entered on the verdict absolving Marine. Gordon has not appealed from the judgment against him.

We have found error in several of the points assigned as error by appellants. However, none of these errors, nor their combined effect, has caused sufficient prejudice to constitute reversible error. And so the judgment appealed from is affirmed. But because of the importance of the subject matter of certain non-prejudicial errors committed in the trial of this action, they are discussed in parts of the following opinion.

Initially, we note that there is sufficient evidence in the record as it appears before us to require upholding the jury verdict for respondent Marine Adams. Appellants’. theory with respect to liability of Marine was: she honked her horn at Gordon just as he reached the intersection; he heard it and his attention was distracted from the road ahead; and this distraction caused the collision. However, Gordon Adams’s testimony contains the following:

“Q. Mr. Adams, did you ever, prior to that accident, hear a horn honking behind you?
“A. I did not.”

His further testimony is corroborative: he said he remembered nothing about a horn honking and he was not aware that Marine may have tried to get his attention — although he had seen her, perhaps through a rear-view mirror.

Appellants’ evidence on this point was the following testimony. Appellant Richard Openshaw said that just after the accident, the Adamses had visited him in the hospital and there Marine had said she had honked the horn and distracted Gordon who then “was looking at me, and we just didn’t see you.” A deputy sheriff of Gooding County, Bill Bunn, said he investigated the accident and that either Gordon or Marine told him Marine honked and Gordon looked back over his shoulder. Appellant Hope Openshaw said that right after the accident, she heard a voice (apparently Gordon Adams’s) say: “I just didn’t see them. My head was *491 turned. I was looking at my wife. She was hollering and honking at me.”

However, Gordon denied the alleged assertions concerning honking made in the hospital room conversation and denied having made at the accident scene the statement attributed to him by Hope Openshaw. Marine Adams said she did not remember discussing in the hotel room the subject of horn honking. Concerning Bill Bunn’s testimony, both respondents said they did not remember any discussion of horn honking or head turning. Finally, Hope and Richard Openshaw each made statements concerning the accident to an insurance investigator, which contained no reference to horn honking (however, as will be discussed infra, parts I and II appellants contend that there were good reasons for such silence, primarily that they considered the incident irrelevant to the investigation).

Appellants do not deny that the evidence in the record would require affirmance. However, they contend that each of three separate rulings by the district court rejecting certain evidence offered by appellants was reversible error. The challenged rulings are:
(1) Not permitting Mrs. Openshaw to testify that prior to trial, in a deposition given January 6, 1966, to respondents’ attorney, she spoke of the horn honking incident.
(2) Not permitting Mr. Openshaw to explain more fully why a written statement made by him to an insurance adjuster was silent about the horn honking.
(3) (a) Quashing appellants’ subpoena duces tecum addressed to an insurance adjuster who had taken certain statements from the parties during an investigation of the accident; and,
(b) Not permitting the adjuster to testify concerning contents of the subpoenaed statements.

These alleged errors will be considered in that order. Wherever pertinent, additional facts will be discussed.

I. EVIDENCE OF PRIOR CONSISTENT STATEMENTS

Facts.

The accident occurred on April 1, 1965. April 27, 1965, Hope Openshaw gave an account of the accident to an insurance adjuster. The transcription is about forty typewritten lines and contains only the following in reference to Marine Adams’s role in the accident:

“Afterwards when I was lying on the ground I heard a man, presumably Mr. Adams, say T did not see the car; I was. looking in my mirror at my wife and a car she was in’, or words to this effect.”

On cross-examination at trial, respondents’attorney read to Mrs. Openshaw the quoted remarks and then asked:

“Q. There is nothing about Mr. Adams’saying at the scene, as you testified yesterday, his wife was hollering at him and honking the horn. There is nothing in that statement, is there?”

Mrs. Openshaw answered:

“A. No. But I want you to know at the time this was taken I was with my husband, and he was critically ill, and I don’t remember what I said.”

For purposes of “rehabilitation” as a witness, on redirect examination Mrs. Openshaw testified that while respondents’ attorney was taking her deposition 1 January 4, 1966 (complaint having been filed in December 1965), she told him about the horn honking incident. On objection, the court ordered the answer stricken and the jury admonished not to consider it.

However, appellants’ attorney clarified that:

“Q. This statement is typed. Did you type it?
“A. No, I didn’t.
“Q. So when Mr. Benoit says that you said a certain thing, what actually has happened is somebody typed this up and *492 you signed the statement at the hospital, is that right?
“A. Yes, and I have never seen this before.”

And immediately after the court’s exclusionary order on the prior consistent statement, Mrs. Openshaw’s testimony contains the following:

“Q. Assuming there was a man who came to the hospital in Salt Lake City to talk to you, did he ask if Mrs. Adams honked her horn?
“A. No, he didn’t ask me anything about horn honking.”

Contentions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
445 P.2d 663, 92 Idaho 488, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/openshaw-v-adams-idaho-1968.