Peterson v. Wright

191 P.2d 645, 183 Or. 223, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 168
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 P.2d 645 (Peterson v. Wright) 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
Peterson v. Wright, 191 P.2d 645, 183 Or. 223, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 168 (Or. 1948).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

On the 21st day of February, 1946, plaintiffs consummated the purchase of the farm formerly owned by defendant upon which the dwelling house and walnut tree in suit were situated. Defendant by agreement with plaintiffs remained in possession of said dwelling house; and said walnut tree was in close proximity to the dwelling house.

On the 7th day of March, 1946, while defendant was occupying the dwelling house, a fire consumed it and badly damaged said walnut tree.

In plaintiffs’ amended complaint it is alleged:

“That said defendant, was careless and negligent in the eare, control and possession of said dwelling house in the following particulars:
(1) Said defendant permitted paper and inflammable material to be piled near and adjacent to the ignited heating stove located in the house.
(2) Permitted and allowed fire to burn in said *225 heating stove when the same was unattended and at an hour late in the night.
(3) Used and operated a stove that was not safe in that the door or front opening thereof would not catch or lock so as to keep burning material from falling out on the floor.
(4) Placed wood and other ignited material in said stove in such a manner as to permit the same to fall against the door or opening and causing the same to open and allow ignited material to fall upon the premises adjacent to the stove.”

It is also alleged that the carelessness and negligence of said defendant was the proximate cause of said fire and the loss of said dwelling house and walnut tree.

Defendant in her answer to plaintiffs’ amended complaint admitted that on March 7, 1946, defendant was in possession of the house in suit and on said day a fire occurred and destroyed it.

Defendant also admitted that at the time of the fire the wahiut tree mentioned in the complaint was damaged by fire.

Issue was joined as to the value of said dwelling house and walnut tree.

All other allegations of plaintiffs’ amended complaint were denied by defendant.

When plaintiffs rested their ease, the learned trial judge sustained defendant’s motion for involuntary nonsuit on the ground that there was no testimony tending to show that the negligence, if any, of defendant was the proximate cause of the destruction of the dwelling house or the damage to the walnut tree.

A review of the testimony upon which plaintiffs rely as sustaining their allegations of negligence and proximate • cause is necessary in order to determine *226 whether error was committed in the trial of the ease as contended by plaintiffs.

Mrs. Peterson, one of the plaintiffs, testified that, when plaintiffs were purchasing it, they went over the interior of the building rather thoroughly, and that there was a wood range in the kitchen and an old heater in the sitting room.

She was then asked: “Did you have an occasion to observe the heater?” To this she answered:

“Yes. One night when we went over, talking this sale over with her, it was at night, and she had a terrific fire in the heater because at that time she was drying walnuts in the sitting room. There were walnuts through the room in boxes and she had a terrific fire in this heater, and the door was slightly ajar. I don’t know whether it was catched thoroughly or had not been, but there was a slight jar that you could see light from the edges of the stove.”

It will be noted that the incident above recounted occurred while negotiations for the sale of the premises were pending. The sale was closed on February 21, 1946, the fire occurred on March 7, 1946, so that the above quoted testimony refers to a time at least two weeks prior to the fire.

Mrs. Barbara Bindel testified that in the fall of 1944, defendant told her that the stove was “broken and she had to have it fixed.”

Upon being asked by the court if defendant ever told the witness that defendant had it fixed, the witness Mrs. Bindel answered: “No. I wasn’t there since then.”

Mr. H. W. Howard, who was employed by the State Police Department in the branch of that department that conducts the investigation of fires, testified that, *227 while investigating the fire in suit, he had occasion to talk with defendant.

We quote from the transcript of his testimony, with respect to the statements made to him by defendant, as follows:

“Q And where did you see her?
A I contacted her at the hotel in which she was stopping on the morning of March the 12th.
Q Was anyone with you?
A No, sir.
Q Did you talk with her at that time?
A I brought her to the district attorney’s office in Dallas and talked with her en route here and at the district attorney’s office.
Q Now, will you relate to the jury your conversation with Mrs. Wright with reference to the fire?
A She stated that the evening of the fire she had gone to bed about dark and was unable to sleep and gotten up about 11:00 p. m. She wrote two letters, one to her sister and to a lady friend who resided in Michigan and she had gotten up, there wasn’t any fire in the heating stove and that she had built one, using paper and kindling and that the fire was still burning when she finished the letters about 1:00 a. m. and she retired, that she had gone to sleep and was awakened by her dog that always remained in the bedroom with her. The dog was licldng her face and she awakened and the room was full of smoke; that she got up and dressed, put on her shoes and stockings and dressed and took a bathrobe and her purse that was under her pillow and went downstairs. Arriving downstairs, why, she attempted to get to the telephone but she said the telephone was in the vicinity of the heating stove and it was so smoky and intense heat in that part of the room that she was unable to get to the phone. She said she wasn’t able to see any blaze but the fire seemed to be burning in
*228 the partition between the living room and the dining room, or the dining room and the kitchen. She stated she then started carrying things from the honse, and she carried out a box that she had packed and was on the davenport, and she carried out two or three suitcases that she had packed and were on the bed in the downstairs bedroom; that she also removed a coat and two dresses that were in the closet in the downstairs bedroom and that the last box she removed from the house was a box containing her silverware that was sitting just inside the front door.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P.2d 645, 183 Or. 223, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-wright-or-1948.