Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co.

75 P.3d 903, 189 Or. App. 478, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 10, 2003
Docket9803-02267; A107409
StatusPublished

This text of 75 P.3d 903 (Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co., 75 P.3d 903, 189 Or. App. 478, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

SCHUMAN, J.

This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court. Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co., 335 Or 143, 61 P3d 923 (2003). In our original decision, we held that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a mistrial; that motion should have been granted, we concluded, because the trial court gave the deadlocked jury an improperly coercive verdict-urging instruction. Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co., 178 Or App 397, 410, 37 P3d 1005 (2001). We therefore reversed and remanded for a new trial. Id. That disposition obviated our need to address defendant’s other assignments of error. The Supreme Court, having granted defendant’s petition for review, agreed with us that the prohibition on coercive jury instructions applied in civil as well as criminal cases. Schlimgen, 335 Or at 152. It held, however, that this conclusion made new law and “should apply prospectively only. It follows that, in this case, the trial court did not commit reversible error by giving a verdict-urging instruction * * *.”1 Id. We therefore must now consider the assignments of error that we did not reach in our earlier opinion.

Those assignments number three: the court erred in refusing to give defendant’s requested jury instruction regarding statutory negligence; it erred in denying defendant a fair opportunity to cross-examine one of plaintiffs experts; and it erred in allowing plaintiffs expert to testify a third time after his testimony had twice been struck. We affirm.

The following facts, as we wrote them in Schlimgen, provide the necessary background:

“Plaintiff is the personal representative of Michael Schlimgen (Schlimgen), who was killed when a tractor-trailer driven by Kelley, defendant’s employee, jackknifed on 1-5 near an on-ramp south of Portland. Most of the facts were vigorously contested at trial. This much is undisputed: Schlimgen, a tow truck driver, arrived at a point just south of the southbound on-ramp in order to move a flatbed truck that had skidded off the pavement. Schlimgen parked his tow truck [on the paved shoulder of the road] and started to [481]*481set up a line of orange warning triangles to divert traffic away from the area where he intended to work. Meanwhile, Kelley was driving southbound in the far right lane of 1-5. Just before he reached a point where the on-ramp finishes merging into the highway, the driver of a Honda, attempting to enter from the on-ramp, sped up, pulled past Kelleys truck on the right, cut left in front of it, and slowed abruptly. Kelley slammed on his brakes but could not avoid colliding with the Honda, sending it into a spin. At the same time, Kelleys tractor-trailer jackknifed and skidded, rotating 180 degrees before coming to a stop. One or both of the vehicles struck Schlimgen. The Honda crashed into Schlim-gen’s tow truck. When it was all over, Schlimgen lay dead on the gravel shoulder.”

178 Or App at 399. The jury found Schlimgen had been 40 percent at fault and defendant 60 percent. Defendant moved for a new trial, the court denied the motion, and the appeal process began.

DEFENDANTS STATUTORY NEGLIGENCE INSTRUCTION

To prevail on its assertion that the trial court erred in not giving a requested instruction, defendant must demonstrate that “the trial court’s failure to give the requested instruction probably created an erroneous impression of the law in the minds of the members of the jury’ and that the “erroneous impression may have affected the outcome of the case.” Hernandez v. Barbo Machinery Co., 327 Or 99, 106-07, 957 P2d 147 (1998). Here, defendant argues that the trial court gave a potentially misleading and erroneous “statutory negligence” jury instruction because, although it correctly characterized the legal effect of a statutory violation and it correctly instructed that Schlimgen had a statutory duty under ORS 822.220(2) to activate his truck’s warning lights, the court also should have specified that the statute requires that a “tow truck driver’s decision to close the lane must be reasonable, and that the tow truck driver must place warning devices before closing the lane.” Neither of those alleged failures, however, could have created a prejudicial erroneous impression of the law.

[482]*482ORS 822.220(2) provides:

“A person commits the offense of failure to take precautions when obstructing traffic with a tow vehicle or wrecker if the person is operating a wrecker or tow vehicle engaged in the salvaging of another vehicle and the operator does not do all of the following:
“(a) Determine that the salvaging operation requires stopping the wrecker or tow vehicle in the roadway.
“(b) Place warning signs or signals as prescribed under ORS 815.070 at a suitable distance in each direction upon the roadway.
“(c) Activate tow vehicle warning lights described in ORS 816.280.”

The court properly refused to instruct the jury that the statute imposed an obligation on Schlimgen to make only a reasonable decision to close a lane of traffic. The statute deals with stopping a tow vehicle in the roadway. But as defendant itself characterizes the facts in its brief, Schlimgen did not stop his vehicle “in the roadway” so as to close a lane of traffic; rather, he “parked his tow truck on the shoulder.” A diagram in defendant’s brief confirms that description. To the extent that Schlimgen closed a lane of traffic, he did so (or was attempting to do so when he was killed) with flares and warning triangles, not with his truck.

Further, nothing in the statute itself imposes a reasonableness requirement. To the extent that such a requirement exists, it does so by virtue of the common-law obligation to act reasonably to avoid foreseeable risk. The court did, in fact, instruct the jury on that duty:

“Common law negligence is the requirement of every person to use reasonable care in everything they do to avoid harming themselves and other people.”

The court also instructed, with specific reference to Schlimgen’s placement of warning devices:

“In order to properly perform the salvage operation, the operator of the tow truck may close that portion of the main traveled roadway as is reasonably necessary to perform the operation.”

[483]*483Thus, the decision not to instruct on reasonableness as part of the statutory negligence instruction was proper because the statute itself does not impose that obligation, and, even if it did, the instructions, viewed as a whole, instructed the jury to take reasonableness into account. Defendant’s proposed instruction would have added only the statement, with respect to placing warning devices, that Schlimgen was negligent unless he was acting as a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances. The difference between that instruction and the ones that were given is insignificant.

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Related

Schlimgen v. MAY TRUCKING COMPANY
61 P.3d 923 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2003)
Hiestand v. Wolfard
536 P.2d 520 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
Rhodes v. Harwood
571 P.2d 492 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)
Hernandez v. Barbo MacHinery Co.
957 P.2d 147 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1998)
Schlimgen v. May Trucking Co.
37 P.3d 1005 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P.3d 903, 189 Or. App. 478, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlimgen-v-may-trucking-co-orctapp-2003.