Schassen v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System

270 P. 530, 126 Or. 363, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 231
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 270 P. 530 (Schassen v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System) 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
Schassen v. Columbia Gorge Motor Coach System, 270 P. 530, 126 Or. 363, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 231 (Or. 1928).

Opinion

COSHOW, J.

There is no claim here that the complaint does not state sufficient facts to constitute an action against defendant. There is no serious claim made that defendant was free from negligence. It is ably argued and seriously contended here that the complaint states facts showing plaintiff to have been guilty of contributory negligence. It is also earnestly urged that plaintiff’s testimony affirma *366 tively shows that his injuries are the result of his own lack of care. It is admitted that plaintiff’s negligence would prevent his recovery if that negligence contributed to his injuries.

The complaint is too prolix to set out in this opinion. It charges defendant with parking one of its large busses on the highway. The bus was traveling south. While that bus was so parked another bus also operated by defendant and proceeding north was stopped beside the other bus, thus completely blocking the highway. Plaintiff was proceeding south at 6:45 p. m. when it was quite dark. Defendant is charged with having very bright, powerful lights on the bus traveling north which were permitted to shine along the highway while standing beside the parked bus headed south.

‘ ‘ That said lights that the defendant so unlawfully wantonly, carelessly, and negligently permitted and suffered to remain burning threw out upon the said highway strong rays of light that were very bright and glaring and for a distance of two hundred yards or thereabouts in a northerly direction from where the defendant’s two automobiles were standing, said lights were so directed that they shone, and said rays of light, glaring and strong, aforesaid, were permitted to shine upon the highway, therefore blinding the plaintiff who was proceeding in a southerly direction upon said highway so as to prevent and make impossible for the plaintiff to see the automobile that belonged to said defendant that was proceeding in a southerly direction while standing upon said highway and leading thereby the plaintiff to believe that he, the plaintiff, was meeting another automobile that was at that time in motion, and proceeding in a northerly direction; that said lights shone directly upon the highway and into the plaintiff’s face and into his eyes making it impossible for the plaintiff to see either of said automobiles *367 other than to see said lights, all of which was caused by the unlawful, wanton, carelessness and negligence of the defendant, its officers, agents and employees.”

The gist of defendant’s attack on the complaint is that it alleges he drove his car about 200 yards while blinded. While the complaint does not directly so charge it is open to that construction. It was not tested either by motion or by demurrer. It should be construed as favorably to plaintiff as its language will permit: Columbia Hotel Co. v. Rosenberg, 122 Or. 675 (260 Pac. 235). The complaint does not specify the distance from defendant’s two busses plaintiff was unable to see. said busses. It does not specify the time he was so blinded. It does aver that the lights were so strong that their rays extended about 200 yards along the highway.

Plaintiff testified with reference to the effect of the strong lights on defendant’s bus as follows:

“When I first come in contact with the lights they didn’t bother me, but after I had went a little ways they began getting brighter, and I don’t know, I don’t know positively, probably the last fifty feet or such a matter I was blinded by the strong lights. * * I was slowed down when I came within contact with the light and took my foot off the accelerator and just slid along and when I became blinded I put my foot on the foot brake and applied it lightly. ’ ’

Plaintiff also testified that he came within range of the bright lights about 200 yards from said busses, and passed through the blinding glare thereof about 10 feet from the bus with which his car collided too late to prevent the collision. He estimated that he diminished the speed of his ear from 30 miles an hour when he first came within range of defendant’s powerful lights to 15 miles per hour when the collision occurred.

*368 Defendant, insisting that the complaint alleges plaintiff was blinded from the time he came within range of the lights and operated his car while so blinded a distance of 200 yards, argues plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence preventing him recovering in this action. Defendant cites the following authorities: Woodhead v. Wilkinson, 181 Cal. 599 (185 Pac. 851, 10 A. L. R. 291); Hammond v. Morrison, 90 N. J. Law, 15 (100 Atl. 154); Jaqwith v. Worden, 73 Wash. 349 (132 Pac. 33, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 827); Mathers v. Botsford, 68 Fla. 40 (97 South. 282, 32 L. R. A. 881); Budnick v. Peterson, 215 Mich. 678 (184 N. W. 493); Hazel v. Hoopeston-Danville Motor Bus Co., 310 Ill. 38 (141 N. E. 392, 30 A. L. R. 491); Osbun v. DeYoung, 99 N. J. Law, 204 (122 Atl. 809); Hatzakorzian v. Rucker-Fuller Desk Co., 197 Cal. 82 (239 Pac. 709, 41 A. L. R. 1027); Grosz v. Bone, 48 S. D. 65 (201 N. W. 871); Short v. State, 179 N. Y. Supp. 539; Day v. Cunningham, 125 Me. 328 (133 Atl. 855, 44 A. L. R. 1229).

The evidence that plaintiff was blinded while traversing from 20 to 40 feet of the 200 yards in which he traveled in the range of the offending lights supports the allegation of the complaint hereinabove set out without the amendment thereto allowed by the court during the trial. We repeat plaintiff is entitled to a liberal construction of the complaint: Bottig v. Polsky, 101 Or. 530 (201 Pac. 188); Columbia Hotel Co. v. Rosenberg, 122 Or. 675 (260 Pac. 235).

Only four of the eleven cases cited by defendant and set out above decide as a matter of law that one blinded by bright lights must stop his car. The other seven cases hold that whether or not one so blinded was guilty of negligence in proceeding is *369 a question of fact. Indeed, the later case from New Jersey, Osbun v. DeYoung, above, in page 512 of 122 Atl., used this language:

“Moreover, in view of the driver’s testimony that he was blinded by the arc light so that he could not see ahead more than 8 or 10 feet, it becomes impossible to conceive how there could be any causal connection between the absence of a tail light or an obscuration of it with the driver’s negligent conduct in failing to stop his car until his vision was improved, or at least to reduce the speed of the car so that it could be stopped in time to avoid a collision with an obstacle in the way 8 or 10 feet ahead.’r

This case was submitted to a jury, and the jury found the driver negligent. The court was bound by the verdict as is this court on questions of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
270 P. 530, 126 Or. 363, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schassen-v-columbia-gorge-motor-coach-system-or-1928.