Sheard v. Oregon Elec. Ry. Co.

282 P. 542, 131 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 274
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 282 P. 542 (Sheard v. Oregon Elec. Ry. Co.) 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
Sheard v. Oregon Elec. Ry. Co., 282 P. 542, 131 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 274 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

IN BANC.

This is an action brought by the administratrix of the estate of William L. Sheard, deceased, against the Oregon Electric Railway company, to recover damages for the death of said decedent on account of the alleged negligent killing of deceased in a collision between the automobile truck, owned and operated by deceased, with an electric train operated by defendant. Defendant appeals from judgment for the plaintiff.

AFFIRMED. *Page 417

The pleadings are long and somewhat involved, and it is difficult to condense them so as to secure brevity, but we take the court's statement of them as being fairly correct.

The corporate character of the defendant; the fact of its operation of the railway at the point indicated; the fact that plaintiff's intestate met his death as a consequence of the collision, and the fact that plaintiff is his administratrix, are admitted. The facts constituting plaintiff's alleged cause of action are stated by the judge in his charge to the jury, and are as follows:

"She (alluding to plaintiff) says that Hood street between Lane and Abernethy streets and point south is paved with concrete paving; that the defendant's easterly track turns southwesterly off of Hood street at a point about 50 feet north of the north side of Abernethy street. That defendant's easterly track along Hood street is paved between the rails and about one foot on the ouside of both rails with stone blocks up to near the point where said easterly track turns westerly off of Hood street. That where the easterly track leaves Hood street and for a considerable distance southwesterly, the track rises at a sharp grade of about 3 1/2 per cent rise. That the stone block paving on defendant's easterly track from the point where it leaves the west side of Hood street northerly for more than 60 feet, the stone block paving is in a loose worn, unsafe and dangerous condition to automobile traffic on Hood street, and that during all of the times mentioned in the complaint there was a worn groove on the inside of the rails about three inches wide and three inches deep next to the rails sufficient to allow the wheel of an automobile to be caught therein. That at the point where the stone block paving between the rails of defendant's easterly track turns west off of Hood street, the stone block paving ends at right angles with said track on an angle with the west side *Page 418 of Hood street, and on the easterly side of the end of the stone block pavement out in Hood street there is a triangular hole 16 inches wide and 5 inches deep on the inside of the easterly rail. That there is no decking, planking, pavement or other filling on top of the ties between the rails of defendant's easterly track in Hood street as the same turns off of the west side thereof and for more than several hundred feet above said track, and that the rails rest upon the ties and are five inches high, and the rails out in Hood street and along southerly up the track stand up unguarded and unprotected to the height of five inches above the ties.

"She alleges that on February 1, 1927, at the time William L. Sheard was killed, that the stone block paving and the easterly railroad track was in such condition that the grooves or trenches were three inches wide and three inches deep between the rails and next to the rails with the stone block paving rough and insecure and with said triangular hole at the end of the stone block paving between the rails out in Hood street and the same was at that time unprotected and had been for a long time prior thereto and that the street, railroad track and stone block paving was in an unsafe and dangerous condition to automobile traffic along Hood street.

"She says that the defendant negligently and carelessly on the 1st day of February, 1927, and prior thereto maintained and permitted said stone block paving to be and remain in said rough, dangerous and unsafe condition, and negligently and carelessly permitted and maintained said triangular hole at the end of the stone block paving between its track on the west side of Hood street, and negligently and carelessly permitted and maintained its railroad track where it leaves Hood street to be undecked, unplanked, unpaved, unfilled or at all guarded or protected, and negligently and carelessly permitted the rails to stand up five inches in Hood street unguarded and unprotected, and negligently and carelessly permitted and maintained its railroad track in Hood street to be and *Page 419 remain in an unsafe and dangerous condition where persons operating automobiles or trucks would be likely to be injured, and that, she says, was the condition of the track at the time of Mr. Sheard's death.

"She says that where the track turns westerly off Hood street — at the point where the easterly track turns westerly off of Hood street, is in a thickly settled residential district in the city of Portland, Oregon, and that Hood street and Abernethy street are both legally dedicated, open and traveled streets, and were so for a long time prior to the first day of February, 1927.

"The complaint then says that on February 1, 1927, about 7:30 p.m of that day, it then being dark and raining and storming, Hood street being wet and covered with water, and the depressions along defendant's track were filled with water and the spaces between the rails of defendant's easterly track on Hood street where the same turns off of the west side of Hood street was filled with water and plaintiff's intestate, William L. Sheard, was then operating and driving his Ford truck with another person riding therein with him going southerly along the west side of Hood street, and when he attempted to cross the easterly track of defendant's railroad track at a point where the railroad track turns westerly off of Hood street, the right front wheel of the truck caught between the rails of the easterly track and fell into the triangular hole, whereby the truck was deflected from its course south and slid along said rail up the track toward Abernethy street and out of Hood street. That plaintiff's intestate, William L. Sheard, attempted to turn the truck back into Hood street but was unable to pull the front wheel across the easterly rail of defendant's track, it being five inches high from the ties upon which the wheel was resting, and in attempting to get the truck wheel over the rail and off of the track and into Hood street, the truck was moved up the track a distance of about 50 feet from the point where it left Hood street. That at the time while plaintiff's intestate, Mr. Sheard, and the other person *Page 420

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Bluebook (online)
282 P. 542, 131 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheard-v-oregon-elec-ry-co-or-1929.