Thompson v. Inskeep

770 P.2d 953, 95 Or. App. 688
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 22, 1989
DocketA8512-07551; CA A47063
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 770 P.2d 953 (Thompson v. Inskeep) 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
Thompson v. Inskeep, 770 P.2d 953, 95 Or. App. 688 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*690 GRABER, P. J.

This is a personal injury action arising from a collision between an automobile driven by plaintiff and one driven by defendant Jeffrey Inskeep and owned by his defendant father. 1 The jury found that plaintiff was 56 percent negligent. Judgment was entered for defendant, and plaintiff appeals. We affirm.

Plaintiffs only assignment of error is that the trial court erred in failing to give his proposed instruction on comparative negligence. 2 Defendant responds that plaintiff is foreclosed from making the argument, because he failed to preserve it. We agree.

The dispositive issue is whether plaintiff was required to take an exception to preserve the alleged error. ORCP 59H provides, in part, that no exception is necessary if no instruction is given on the subject of the requested instruction:

“[N]o instruction given to a jury shall be subject to review upon appeal unless its error, if any, was pointed out to the judge who gave it and unless a notation of an exception is *691 made immediately after the court instructs the jury. * * * It shall be unnecessary to note an exception in court to any other ruling made. All adverse rulings, including failure to give a requested instruction or a requested statement of issues, except those contained in instructions and statements of issues given, shall import an exception in favor of the party against whom the ruling was made.”

Here, the court instructed the jury about comparative negligence in the course of explaining the verdict form. That form was based on UCJI 11.59, which plaintiff himself had requested. In pertinent part, the verdict, as returned, reads:

“2. Was defendant driver negligent in one or more of the respects claimed in plaintiffs complaint which caused damage to plaintiff?
“ANSWER: Yes
(Yes or No)
<<‡ * * * *
“3. Was plaintiff negligent in one or more of the respects claimed in defendant’s answer which caused damage to plaintiff?
“ANSWER: Yes
(Yes or No)
<<* * * * *
“4. What is the percent of each of the parties’ negligence which caused damage to plaintiff?
“ANSWER: Defendant 44 %
Plaintiff 56 %
“(The percentages must total 100%)
“If plaintiffs percentage is greater than 50%, your verdict is for the defendant. Your presiding juror should sign this verdict form. Do not answer any further questions.”

The trial court had also instructed the jury about the parties’ mutual claims of negligence, the obligation of each party to prove by a preponderance of the evidence the negligence of the other in at least one of the ways alleged, and the definition of negligence. The court then discussed the verdict form with the jury at length and said, in pertinent part:

“And comparative negligence. Negligence as comparative negligence. I’m going to give you a verdict form in a few *692 minutes that details a series of questions that I would like you to answer. * * *
“Question No. 4 now is predicated upon a finding by you that both drivers were negligent, and what we want you to do at this point with Question No. 4 is compare this relative contribution. So Question No. 4 says, ‘What is the percentage of each of the parties — ’ that is, the drivers — ‘negligence which caused damage to the Plaintiff?’ And then there’s a line, ‘Plaintiff blank with percentage,’ and ‘Defendant blank with percentage’. * * * And obviously, the percentages, the two together, have to equal 100 percent.
“And then there is this statement to you: If the Plaintiffs percentage is greater than 50 percent — that is, the Plaintiff himself contributed more than 50 percent of negligence to cause the accident, your verdict is for the Defendant, because Plaintiff is barred from recovery if he is more than 50 percent negligent. You would stop and not go on to the damage issue, and have the presiding juror sign the verdict form.”

It is immaterial that that instruction explained the verdict form as well as comparative negligence. It was nonetheless an instruction on comparative negligence within the meaning of ORCP 59H. The commentary to ORCP 59H pro-.. vides, in part:

“Section 59H. is based on ORS 17.505 through 17.515 * * *. On the question of whether failure to give a requested instruction preserves error in instructions given, see Holland v. Sisters of Saint Joseph, 270 Or 129[, 522 P2d 208, 526 P2d 577] (1974), and Becker v. Beaverton School District, 25 Or App 879[, 551 P2d 498] (1976).” Reprinted in Merrill, Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure: 1988 Handbook at 184.

In Holland, the Supreme Court held that there must be something in a proposed instruction that “clearly and directly” calls the trial court’s attention to the error in the instruction given. 270 Or at 141. Relying in part on Holland, Roberts v. Mitchell Bros., 289 Or 119, 131, 611 P2d 297 (1980), held that no exception is required if the proposed instruction is “clearly and directly” contrary to an instruction that the court gives, thereby calling the trial court’s attention to the alleged error. Although Roberts and Holland were decided under former ORS *693 17.510, 3 the adoption of ORCP 59H did not undercut their holdings.

Citing Sandford v. Chev. Div. Gen. Motors, 292 Or 590, 642 P2d 624 (1982), plaintiff complains about one phrase that the court used in describing the statement below Question No. 4 on the verdict form: “If * * * the Plaintiff himself contributed more than 50 percent of negligence to cause the accident, your verdict is for the Defendant.” Paragraph two of the requested instruction, see n 2, supra, did not “clearly and directly” alert the trial court to the purported error of which plaintiff now complains. Accordingly, an express exception that told the court how the two instructions differed and why the court’s was wrong was required to preserve the error.

Plaintiff declined to state an exception when the trial court invited him to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 P.2d 953, 95 Or. App. 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-inskeep-orctapp-1989.