Templeton v. Smith
This text of 744 P.2d 1325 (Templeton v. Smith) 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.
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In this rear-end automobile collision case, plaintiffs appeal a judgment for defendant entered after a jury verdict.1 The sole assignment of error is that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on “sudden emergency,” UCJI No. 10.10.2 We reverse.
Defendant testified that she was approaching a red traffic signal behind plaintiffs’ vehicle, traveling in fairly heavy stop and go traffic at not more than 15 miles per hour. She looked in her rear view mirror momentarily. When she looked back at the road, plaintiffs’ vehicle had stopped. Defendant applied her brakes but was unable to avoid the collision. Plaintiffs testified that they stopped between ten feet and one car length behind the preceding vehicle. At defendant’s request, the trial judge gave the emergency instruction. During its deliberations, the jury requested that it be reinstructed on negligence, and the judge read them instructions on causation and negligence, UCJI 10.01 and 10.02. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant.
The emergency instruction is not favored:
“* * * [T]his instruction is to be avoided, and * * * rarely, if ever, will a failure to give the instruction constitute reversible error. * * * [The] usual instructions on negligence sufficiently cover what a reasonably prudent person would do under all circumstances, including those of sudden emergency.” Jones v. Mitchell Bros., 266 Or 513, 526-527, 511 P2d 347 (1973). (Citations omitted.)
We doubt that an emergency charge should ever be given in an ordinary automobile accident case. See Vander Laan v. Miedema, 385 Mich 226, 188 NW2d 564 (1971); Finley v. [269]*269Wiley, 103 NJ Super 95, 246 A2d 715 (1968). As Prosser and Keeton state:
“* * * [S]ome ‘emergencies’ must be anticipated, and the actor must be prepared to meet them when he engages in an activity in which they are likely to arise. Thus, under present day traffic conditions, any driver of an automobile must be prepared for the sudden appearance of obstacles and persons in the highway, and of other vehicles at intersections, just as one who sees a child on the curb may be required to anticipate its sudden dash into the street * * Torts 197 § 33, (5th ed 1984). (Footnotes omitted.)
This case is a “rear-ender.” Defendant was not confronted with anything even closely resembling an emergency. Plaintiffs came to a stop in front of defendant sooner than she expected. She failed to see plaintiffs stop because she was looking in her rear view mirror. If a hazard existed at all, it was the type which should be anticipated under the circumstances of ordinary driving. There were no extraordinary circumstances, such as a truck careening out of control or a sudden mechanical failure. See Weitzel v. Wingard, 274 Or 185, 546 P2d 121 (1976); Swanson v. Hale, 273 Or 138, 539 P2d 1073 (1975); Harkins v. Doyle, 271 Or 664, 533 P2d 785 (1975); Rankin v. White, 258 Or 252, 482 P2d 530 (1971).
Allowing the emergency instruction here would encourage extension of a superfluous instruction to a huge number of automobile accident cases. Using the instruction in this case would unfairly emphasize defendant’s evidence and confuse the jury. Those concerns are clearly illustrated here by the fact that the jury in this simple negligence case requested reinstruction.
Reversed and remanded.
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744 P.2d 1325, 88 Or. App. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/templeton-v-smith-orctapp-1987.