Sherrard v. Werline

91 P.2d 344, 162 Or. 135, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 79
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 344 (Sherrard v. Werline) 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
Sherrard v. Werline, 91 P.2d 344, 162 Or. 135, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 79 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment of the circuit court, based upon the verdict of a jury and entered in an action which was predicated upon a charge that the defendant, John Werline, the eighteen-year-old son of the other defendant, Eunice Werline, so negligently drove a car, owned by the latter, that it ran into and injured the plaintiff who at the time was crossing a public street on foot.

The defendants present seven assignments of error. The first is based upon the denial of their motion for a nonsuit; the second upon a ruling which denied their objections to a hypothetical question; the third upon the denial of their motion for a directed verdict; the fourth, fifth and sixth upon instructions given to the jury; and the seventh upon the court’s refusal to give an instruction requested by them.

Upon this appeal the defendants do not contest the plaintiff’s injury, the defendants’ negligence, and the family use to which the car was being applied. The first and third assignments of error are, therefore, *139 predicated upon the defendants’ charges that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

The accident occurred November 14, 1937, at 5:45 p. m., on North Main Street in the city of Independence. The night was dark, a drizzling rain was falling, the pavement was wet, the street lights were burning, and automobiles were using their lights. The course of Main street, which, carries a fair volume of traffic, is north and south. The street is 80 feet wide with the central 22-foot area paved with roughtop material. Beyond the pavement on both sides are gravel shoulders which extend to the curb or sidewalk line. At the place in Main street with which we are concerned, Oak street, 60 feet wide, enters from the west, but does not cross Main street. The intersection is illuminated with an overhead street light which was burning at the time of the accident.

So far the facts are free from dispute. From now on we shall state many that the defendants do not concede, but, since substantial evidence presented by the plaintiff supports them, we are compelled, for the purposes of the motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict to assume their truth.

At the hour above mentioned the plaintiff reached the aforementioned intersection in an automobile driven by one Floyd Nelson, which stopped on the gravel shoulder of the east side of Main street opposite the south curb of Oak street. The south sidewalk of Oak street does not cross Main street, but the car driven by Nelson stopped in such a position that after the plaintiff had alighted from it and had walked around its rear he was directly east of the sidewalk on the south side of Oak street. It was his purpose to cross Main street at that point and then walk west on the sidewalk *140 just mentioned. At that time, the defendants’ ear, a 1930 Model A Ford, equipped with four-wheel brakes, and driven by the defendant John Werline, was headed south and was some distance north of the Nelson car. Hereafter by the term “defendant” we shall refer to the son, the driver of the car.

As the Nelson car drew up to the above place the plaintiff looked north along Main street, but saw no car approaching from that direction; as a witness, he expressed the belief that his view at that moment may have been obstructed by a car which was a block or so ahead. As he stepped to the ground he saw the lights of a car approaching from the north which turned out to be the defendant’s car. He estimated that it was four or five blocks away. The blocks in that part of Independence are 240 feet long and the intersecting streets are 60 feet wide. Hence, four blocks are 1200 feet and five blocks are 1500 feet. The plaintiff testified that the car he saw was so far away he believed he had plenty of time to cross the street. After alighting he walked to the rear of the car, paused for a moment until it had pulled on ahead and then looked along the course of the street again. To the south he saw a car approaching, but believed that he could cross the street before it reached him. We add that this car was not involved in the accident. As a matter of fact, it did not reach the intersection until the defendant’s car had collided with the plaintiff. It then carried the plaintiff to a physician’s office. When the plaintiff observed the car just mentioned he also looked again to the north but at that time Nelson’s car obscured his vision and he did not see the defendant’s car. He then proceeded to cross the gravel shoulder. The following are his words: “Just stepped out on the highway and *141 looked down the highway and saw I had plenty of time to go across before that car was coming south.” He swore that as he crossed he used the unmarked crosswalk. We again quote from him: “Well, I wasn’t in no hurry; just walked across. Thought I had plenty of time until I got to the center of the highway and then his (defendant’s) car passed the car (Nelson’s) I got out of and then I whirled around and just made a couple of steps and he hit me. ’ ’ He claimed that as he reached the yellow line which marked the center of the pavement the defendant’s car “was at least three or four feet on the east side of that yellow line,” and that it was approaching at a high rate of speed. Next, he testified: “When I seen I couldn’t get across the street ahead of it, I turned around and started back.” He declared that he hesitated for an instant when he saw the car rushing upon him, and, asked how long he hesitated, replied, “Well, it is hard to tell, you know; kind of startled you for a second and when I seen I couldn’t make it across, I turned around.”

He thought that the Nelson car from which he had alighted a moment or two previously and which after discharging him had proceeded northerly may have obstructed his view to the north as he approached the center line and that it may have thus prevented him from seeing defendant’s car. He swore that when he reached the yellow line he saw the defendant’s car about 150 or 200 feet away. He was not sure of the exact distance. We quote from his testimony: “I stopped as soon as I seen the car. I was right in the center of the pavement, right on that yellow line.” He testified that he had driven ears since 1918 and that he was able to estimate their speed. He swore that the defendant “was coming pretty fast,” and when asked to make *142 his answer more definite, replied, “Around fifty miles an hour, maybe better.” As already indicated, he testified that he hesitated for an instant when he saw the car bearing down upon him “and then I turned around. I saw I couldn’t make it across and I turned and started back and I made my second step back when it hit me.” The car’s front bumper struck the plaintiff’s left leg, fracturing the bone in so many places that it was necessary to amputate it. He claimed definitely that when he was struck he was well east of the center line; that is, upon the car’s left side of the pavement. We quote one of his answers: “I know I was at least three or four feet on the east side of that yellow line, and as I looked around the lights were right almost on me.” It will be recalled from the quoted language that the plaintiff described the defendant’s car as “at least three or four feet on the east side of that yellow line.” The east side of the line was the left or wrong side for the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 344, 162 Or. 135, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherrard-v-werline-or-1939.