Plasker v. Fazio

485 P.2d 1075, 259 Or. 171, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 366
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 485 P.2d 1075 (Plasker v. Fazio) 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
Plasker v. Fazio, 485 P.2d 1075, 259 Or. 171, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 366 (Or. 1971).

Opinion

McAllister, j.

While plaintiff was crossing the street in a marked crosswalk he was struck by defendant’s car. The jury, nevertheless, found for defendant and plaintiff appeals, alleging that the court erred in instructing the jury. We affirm.

There was evidence from which the jury could have found the following facts about which there is little dispute. 42nd Avenue in Portland runs north and south and is 36 feet wide. Emerson Street intersects 42nd from the east, forming a “T” intersection. Plaintiff was crossing 42nd from west to east on the north side of Emerson. Defendant was driving north on 42nd and the front of his car struck plaintiff when plaintiff was in the crosswalk. Both plaintiff and [173]*173defendant, as well as the eye witnesses, were on their way to mass at a church on the northeast corner of the intersection.

The witnesses, including plaintiff, fixed the speed of defendant’s car at about 30 miles per hour, which was the indicated speed for that area. The defendant admitted that as he approached and entered the intersection he was looking to his right for a place to park on Emerson. When he looked again to the front plaintiff was directly in front of him and it was too late to stop or swerve. Defendant’s car skidded about eight feet before the impact and about seven feet thereafter.

Plaintiff testified that when he started to cross the street he saw defendant’s car about 250 feet to the south. He further testified that when he was “right about in the center line” he saw defendant’s car about 40 feet away and that the car was “coming about 30 miles an hour.” Plaintiff continued and was struck by the front bumper of defendant’s ear at a point which, according to the traffic investigator, was about six feet east of the center line of 42nd.

Plaintiff assigns as error the giving of the following right of way instruction:

“The plaintiff alleges the defendant negligent i.n failing to yield the right of way. Under the statutory law of the State, there is provided rights of way under certain circumstances. The particular statute applicable in this case in part and insofar as pertinent to the case reads:
“ ‘When traffic control signals, if any, are not in operation a driver of a motor vehicle shall stop and yield the right of way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within any marked crosswalk if the pedestrian is on the half of the roadway on and [174]*174along which the vehicle is traveling or is approaching such half from the other half of the roadway so closely as to be endangered.
“ ‘But in proceeding to cross or in crossing the roadway, the pedestrian shall not leave a curb or other place of safety suddenly and move into the path of a vehicle which is so close that it is impossible for the driver to yield.’
“Now, this section also provides that it does not relieve the driver of a vehicle or a pedestrian from the duty to exercise due care.
“I need to define somewhat the term ‘right of way.’ Bight of way probably is more accurately expressed as the privilege of way, the privilege of immediate use of that portion of the highway in question, and by that we mean that a right of way is not absolute. It may not be exercised arbitrarily or unreasonably. It must be exercised at all times reasonably; and whenever danger to yourself or others is anticipated, due care and caution must be observed to prevent injury.
“In this sense, if a right of way is exercised arbitrarily or unreasonably, then the right of way does not exist. It is forfeited. Not that the other party gets it, but simply the party who would have had it, had he not exercised it unreasonably or arbitrarily, would have had a right of way.
“So it is a question of fact for you to determine as you find those circumstances to be and circumstances are all questions of fact for you to determine. If this plaintiff had a right of way under those circumstances and if he exercised it reasonably and not arbitrarily, and in this exercise of it the' defendant failed to yield — and if those are the facts — then you would find the defendant negligent in this particular.
“Contrarywise, you would not find the defendant negligent in this particular.”

[175]*175Plaintiff excepted to the foregoing instruction in the following language:

“MR. YUNKER: Plaintiff further takes exception to the giving of the instruction submitting question of statutory right of way to the jury for the reason that it is the contention of the plaintiff that the right of way of- — -that the evidence shows that the statutory right of way belonged to the plaintiff and was not or could not be forfeited.
“THE COURT: I understand.
“MR. YUNKER: And the plaintiff further takes exception to the giving of instructions that the right of way to the pedestrian in the crosswalk could not be arbitrarily or unreasonably used for the reason that it is our contention that the statutory right of way for marked crosswalks belongs to the plaintiff and that the instruction given as to the arbitrary or unreasonable use thereof refers to the right of way of motor vehicles.”

As we read plaintiff’s exceptions he was contending that “the statutory right of way belonged to the plaintiff” and that the court erred in “submitting the question of statutory right of way to the jury.” In the second paragraph of his exceptions plaintiff repeated that “the statutory right of way for marked crosswalks belongs to the plaintiff” and objected to the instruction that the pedestrian may not use his right of way “arbitrarily or unreasonably”, contending that such limitation applied only to motor vehicles.

In this court plaintiff, without abandoning his contention that his right of way was absolute, has shifted his main attack to that portion of the instruction which advised the jury that a pedestrian forfeits his right of way if he exercises it arbitrarily or unreasonably.

[176]*176Although we doubt that plaintiff’s exceptions embraced his present contention, we will consider, nevertheless, whether the court erred in advising the jury that plaintiff forfeited his right of way if he exercised it arbitrarily or unreasonably and, if the court erred, whether the error was prejudicial.

When Oregon in 1931 enacted the Uniform Act Begulating Traffic on Highways it provided in mandatory terms that “[t]he driver of any vehicle shall yield the right of way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within any marked crosswalk * * The only qualification was contained in the provision that the right of way did not relieve the pedestrian from the duty to exercise due care.

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Bluebook (online)
485 P.2d 1075, 259 Or. 171, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plasker-v-fazio-or-1971.