Ramp v. Osborne

239 P. 112, 115 Or. 672, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 113
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 239 P. 112 (Ramp v. Osborne) 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
Ramp v. Osborne, 239 P. 112, 115 Or. 672, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 113 (Or. 1925).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

On July 2, 1921, M. S. Ramp, accompanied by his wife, Nellie Ramp and their minor son, Robert Malcolm Ramp, was driving a *675 Ford automobile in which they were riding eastward along a road leading from Brooks in Marion County approximately at right angles across the Pacific Highway, leading northerly from Salem toward Portland. At the intersection of the two roads a collision ensued between the automobile so driven by M. S. Eamp and a Pierce-Arrow car driven north on the highway by the defendant E. Gr. Osborne. As a result of the collision Eamp and his wife and child were all injured. Each of the three brought a separate action against the defendant Osborne, joining with him the defendants Eoss and the Oregon Eubber Company, averring in substance that the defendants negligently operated the Pierce-Arrow car at a careless and reckless rate of speed in excess of fifty miles per hour, carelessly and neligently failed to keep a proper lookout or any lookout for the safety of the traveling public and carelessly and negligently failed to watch where they were driving said car, and while thus carelessly and negligently operating said car, ran into plaintiff’s automobile, demolishing the same, threw out the plaintiff, to his injury, in each case. In each case, the negligence is charged in practically the same language. The resulting injuries are of course different in each instance. The corporate character of the defendant Oregon Eubber Company is admitted in each answer. Otherwise all the complaints are traversed. The defendant Osborne added to his denials a plea imputing to the plaintiff M. S. Eamp contributory negligence, retorting in that respect in practically the same terms employed in the complaint. Likewise Osborne averred a counterclaim against M. S. Eamp for damages accruing to the former by virtue of the collision. By agreement at the trial the defense of contributory *676 negligence as against M. S. Eamp was adopted by Eoss and the Enbber Company as their own, was considered applicable to them as well as to Osborne and was deemed traversed by the reply. No further notice need be taken of the answers of Osborne, as affecting him, because he has not appealed from the adverse judgments. On. stipulation of the parties all three actions were tried together before the same jury in the Circuit Court, with the result that each plaintiff obtained a verdict for damages against all the defendants. From the ensuing three judgments the defendants Homer Eoss and Oregon Enbber Company have appealed.

The assignments of error in a large part are identical as to each appellant. In substance, the theory of the plaintiffs in all the cases was that the defendant Osborne was driving the Pierce-Arrow car and was guilty of negligence in so doing, to the damage of the plaintiffs, and further, that at the time Osborne was the servant of both the other defendants, rendering them responsible for his tort under the familiar doctrine of respondeat superior.

One of the assignments of error is the action of the court in permitting a witness to testify for the plaintiff over the objection of the defendants that at a point four or five miles south of the place of the accident a car which the witness identified as the Pierce-Arrow involved in the collision was seen going at a speed of forty-five miles an hour. In Wade v. City Ry. Co., 36 Or. 311 (59 Pac. 875), such evidence was held inadmissible. The question is the negligence of the offending party ’ at the time and place of the accident. It does' not necessarily follow that a defendant is negligent at the critical time and place because he was negligent at some other place *677 and at a different time. As well might the defendant pnt in testimony that at all other times and places he was extremely careful in the operation of the car. In Flynn v. Lewis, 231 Mass. 550 (121 N. E. 493, 2 A. L. R. 896), the court held that it was pot permissible to show that on the forenoon of the day in the afternoon of which the accident happened the chauffeur drove fast. See, also, Cooney v. Commonwealth Ave. Street R. Co., 196 Mass. 11 (81 N. E. 905). As said by Mr. Justice Bigelow in Robinson v. Fitchburg etc. R. R. Co., 7 Gray (Mass.), 92, 95:

“Evidence of specific acts of negligence and carelessness on the part of the engineer, in running trains on other occasions than the one in question, was clearly incompetent. It would not only lead to collateral inquiries, and so distract and mislead the jury from the true issue before them, but it had no legal or logical tendency to prove the point in issue. Because a man was careless or negligent of his duty in one or two specified instances, it does not follow that he was so at another time and under different circumstances.”

See, also, City of Salem v. Webster, 192 Ill. 369 (61 N. E. 323); Dalton v. Chicago Ry. Co., 114 Iowa, 257 (86 N. W. 272); Christensen v. Union Trunk Line, 6 Wash. 75 (32 Pac. 1018); Oklahoma Ry. Co. v. Thomas, 63 Okl. 219 (164 Pac. 120, L. R. A. 1917E, 405).

For the purpose of imputing ownership of the car in question to the defendant Ross, plaintiffs offered a certified copy of an application of Ross for a dealer’s license plate and another application made by Osborne for a duplicate set of such plates, the others having been lost. It was not shown that Osborne had any authority from Ross to make such *678 an application. Neither was it shown that either the original dealer’s license plates or the duplicates were attached to the car driven by Osborne at the time of the accident. The statute does not make a dealer’s license plate evidence of property in any car. No particular car is described in an application for such plates, and they are attached indiscriminately to any car the dealer owns when he is demonstrating it for the purpose of sale. The court, it is true, restricted their operation to the purpose of identifying the number of the dealer’s license plates issued to Boss. This, however, was not material testimony upon the issue of whether Boss owned the car involved in the accident or not. The effect and purpose of dealer’s license plates are prescribed in Section 4 of Chapter 371 of the Laws of 1921, that being the statute in force at the time of the accident.

As developed in the testimony, the theory of the plaintiffs as against the defendant Boss was that he had employed the defendant Osborne to take the car which Osborne was driving and sell it for the account of Boss and that he was engag'ed in that undertaking at the time of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P. 112, 115 Or. 672, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramp-v-osborne-or-1925.