Peters v. Johnson

264 P. 459, 124 Or. 237, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 50
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 264 P. 459 (Peters v. Johnson) 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
Peters v. Johnson, 264 P. 459, 124 Or. 237, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 50 (Or. 1928).

Opinion

BELT, J.

These actions, by stipulation consolidated here and in the lower court, arose out of an automobile collision in which a boy, about thirteen years of age, named Frank Peters, was injured. The accident occurred on one of the main streets of the City of Astoria in the afternoon of August 13, 1924. The boy was standing on or near the tail-gate of a Bodge truck operated by Johnson & Morrison, a co-partnership engaged in the retail grocery business. He was not in the employ of these defendants, but there is evidence that he was on the truck with their knowledge and consent and was permitted to assist in the delivery of goods to their customers. The truck, facing east, had stopped for the purpose of making a delivery on the south side of Commercial Street, which runs east and west. After the delivery had been made, the driver started to back the truck diagonally across Commercial Street with the apparent intention of driving west thereon. When the vehicle reached approximately the center of the street, an east-bound Ford truck owned by the Columbia Soda Works collided with it, throwing the boy to the pavement, whereby he was seriously and permanently injured.

In one action the father seeks to recover for hospital and medical expenses incurred as a result of this accident. The other action was commenced by the father as the guardian of his son to recover damages for personal injuries the boy is alleged to have *242 sustained. Both actions involve the same specifications of negligence. It is the theory of the plaintiffs that the damage sustained was the proximate result of the combined and concurring negligence of both truck drivers. The driver of the Dodge truck, an employee of Johnson & Morrison, was charged with negligence in backing the automobile (1) without giving any signal or sounding any warning; (2) without looking for oncoming traffic, and (3) at a dangerous and excessive speed. The defendants who constitute the copartnership of the Columbia Soda Works are charged by plaintiff with negligence in that their employee drove the Ford truck (1) at a reckless and unlawful rate of speed, to wit, in excess of twenty miles per hour, and (2) without keeping a lookout for other vehicles using the street. The Columbia Soda Works answered denying the negligence charged and alleging affirmatively and in substance that the accident was due to the contributory negligence of the Peters boy and to the negligence of the driver of the Dodge truck. In charging* negligence against Johnson & Morrison, the complaint of the plaintiff is substantially adopted. Johnson & Morrison answered denying negligence and, in averring that the negligence of the Columbia Soda Works was the proximate cause •of the accident, likewise adopted the specifications of negligence as charged by plaintiff. They also asserted that the boy was guilty of contributory negligence.

Summarizing the issues under the pleadings, the plaintiff alleged that negligence of both defendants was the proximate cause of the accident; both defendants charged the boy with contributory negligence, and each defendant averred that the other, if anybody, was the one to be held responsible. A ver *243 diet in both actions was had for the plaintiff against both defendants and from the judgments entered thereon each defendant has separately appealed.

In these actions the plaintiff occupied a strategic position. After establishing his prima, facie case, it remained only for him to stand by and watch, with some degree of satisfaction, the contest waged between these defendants. The more numerous the charges of negligence hurled against each other, the stronger grew plaintiff’s case. The verdict of the jury was a natural consequence.

We will first consider the appeal of Johnson & Morrison. It is contended that Frank Peters was a bare licensee while riding on the autotruck of these defendants and, therefore, that they owed him only the duty not to wilfully or wantonly injure him. We are of the opinion that he was an invitee. The evidence established without contradiction that the boy was on the autotruck with the knowledge and consent of the driver. For about two weeks prior to the accident the boy, at odd times, had worked about the grocery store helping the clerks to fill orders for customers and, on several occasions, had gone on the truck to help make deliveries. In view of the legal status of the boy, defendants were obliged to exercise due care to avoid injuring him. The facts in this case are analogous to those in Rook v. Schulte, 100 Or. 482 (198 Pac. 234), wherein a boy of about the same age volunteered to assist in the delivery of milk and was injured while riding on the running-board of the auto-truck. It was there held that the law applicable to an invitee was controlling.

There is no merit in the claim that the complaint in the cause of the guardian fails to state a cause of action. It is insisted that it should *244 have been brought by the minor through his guardian and not by the father as the guardian for the minor. This contention is answered adversely to appellants by Section 34, Or. L., wherein it is provided that a guardian “may maintain an action as plaintiff * * for the injury or death of his ward.” We need not inquire as to what may be the authorities in other jurisdictions. Furthermore, if the guardian did not have the capacity to bring this action, such appeared on the face of the complaint and, unless a demurrer was made thereto pointing out the specific objection, the point now urged is deemed to have been waived. A general demurrer will not suffice.

Belative to the complaint it is also argued that it appears from the face thereof, (1) that the backing of the Dodge autotruck “merely created a condition for the accident to happen, which would not have resulted in injuries to the Peters boy except for the subsequent negligence of appellants Columbia Soda Works”; (2) “That the Peters boy came to his injuries on account of appellants Columbia Soda Works driving their truck into our truck, while looking in an opposite direction from which they were driving”; and (3) “That our negligence, if any, had come to a complete end, and that appellants Columbia Soda Works had the last opportunity of avoiding injuries to the Peters boy.” We are unable, as a matter of law, to agree with these conclusions. Such questions were for the determination of the jury. Both trucks were moving at time of collision. The flow of negligence, if plaintiff’s testimony is to be believed, was unchecked by any intervening or independent cause.

An examination of the complaint discloses that, after plaintiff had made specific charges of negligence against each defendant, it was then alleged, “That by *245 reason of said collision and by reason of the negligence and acts of said defendants as above set forth in operating and driving their said respective trucks and thus throwing and pitching the said Frank Peters to the hard pavement, the said Frank Peters was severely injured) * * .” The meaning of the pleader is clear. Failure to use such words as “concurrent” or “simultaneous” in referring to the negligence of the defendants pertains to form rather than substance.

Appellants are not entitled to a directed verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 459, 124 Or. 237, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-johnson-or-1928.