White v. Portland Gas & Coke Co.

165 P. 1005, 84 Or. 643, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 276
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 165 P. 1005 (White v. Portland Gas & Coke 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
White v. Portland Gas & Coke Co., 165 P. 1005, 84 Or. 643, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 276 (Or. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Supporting the complaint there is evidence to the effect that, at the invitation of Mr. Rands as his [647]*647guest, the plaintiff with her two daughters and his wife went riding in his automobile. Mrs. White sat on the left side in the rear seat, one of her daughters next to her, and Mrs. Bands on the right, while another daughter rode on the right of Mr. Bands on the front seat. They were proceeding towards Oregon City from the north on the main traveled road and were going down a hill which had been cut down, using the excavated earth to make a fill about ten feet in height near the foot of the hill. This fill was graveled to a width of about fourteen feet. The gas-main was laid in a ditch approximately two feet in depth, about fourteen inches in width, and some two feet west of the edge of the gravel. The slope on the sides of the fill was quite steep. Testimony on behalf of the plaintiff is to the effect that as they approached it another automobile was being driven quite rapidly up the hill meeting them occupying the major portion of the graveled road; that the Bands’ machine was going at the rate of about three or four miles an hour; that when turned to the right the off wheels sank into the loose earth some six or eight inches and ran thus ten or fifteen feet in the ditch when, owing to the declivity, it turned over, rolled down the embankment lodging against a fence and injuring the plaintiff.

The testimony for the defense is to the purport that the track of the off wheels of the automobile driven by Bands led to the right and across the trench at an angle of about sixty degrees and then proceeded parallel with it some distance, making then a slight turn to the left, and immediately afterwards turning precipitously down the embankment. One of the plaintiff’s daughters testifying, said the other car was coming pretty fast occupying the greater part of the road and was larger than the one driven by Bands. [648]*648The plaintiff stated as a witness that she felt the rush of the air of the car they met and thought they might collide with it. She says she knew the general lay of the land and that the gas-main had been laid in that neighborhood, but that she did not interfere with or protest with Rands about his method of driving.

1. The principal complaint of the plaintiff is about the giving of the instruction first quoted. The exception urged before the Circuit Court was against it as an entirety. The attack made upon it was to the effect that it “did not properly state the law of negligence or contributory negligence which would excuse the negligence of the defendant, and that it assumed as a matter of law the responsibility of the plaintiff for the actions ahd negligence of Mr. Rands.” In the first place it. is clear that if “this accident happened solely on account of the negligence of Mr. Rands then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” This is because there was no relation existing between Rands and the defendant which would render the latter liable for his shortcomings and consequently that part of the instruction was sound. Therefore if we regard the principle laid down by the precedents to the effect that if part of an instruction objected to is sound it will save the remainder, we cannot countenance the objection to the one in question: Murray v. Murray, 6 Or. 17; Salomon v. Cress, 22 Or. 177 (29 Pac. 439); McAlister v. Long, 33 Or. 368 (54 Pac. 194). Moreover, the charge now under consideration does not in any way impute to the plaintiff the negligence of Rands. It is one thing to charge her with his negligence and quite another to exonerate the defendant from its effect. The whole subject of that excerpt was the negligence of Bands. Nothing else [649]*649was discussed therein and it was left to the jury to determine whether he was negligent or not. The sum of the situation on that branch of the case is that if the negligence of Eands, provided there was such negligence, was the sole cause of the injury the defendant could not be held responsible. This is a reasonable paraphrase or interpretation of that part of the charge to the jury.

2. Plaintiff also urged before the trial court that there was no testimony justifying the instruction numbered 3 to the effect that if the accident happened solely on account of the negligence of the people in the other automobile or solely on account of their negligence and that of Eands together the verdict should be for the defendant. As noted above, the testimony tends to show that the other car was being driven rapidly up the hill taking the greater part of the graveled way so that it practically crowded the Eands machine out of the road at least to a large extent. This would be negligence on the part of those in control of the other automobile and if, as the jury may have found, it operated to compel Eands to turn out to avoid what seemed to be the greater danger of collision so that this was the single cause of the accident it would exonerate the defendant. This instruction was predicated on the hypothesis that the mishap resulted solely from the negligence of parties over whom the defendant had no control. In order to sustain this instruction it is only necessary to point out that there was some evidence to go to the jury on that subject.

3,4. The most difficult proposition is whether the court erred in giving instruction numbered 2 on the subject of contributory negligence. It has been decided very frequently and in some of our own precedents [650]*650that the negligence of one operating an automobile cannot be imputed to his guest: Tonseth v. Portland Ry. L. & P. Co., 70 Or. 341 (141 Pac. 868). That, however, is not the precise question in hand. The guest cannot abdicate his duty to use reasonable diligence in caring for himself. As said in Thompson v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co., 165 Cal. 748 (134 Pac. 709, 712):

“It is of course true that a passenger in a vehicle operated by another is bound to exercise ordinary care for his own safety.”

If such passenger is aware that the operator is carelessly rushing into danger it may be incumbent upon him to take proper steps for his own safety. Whether the occupant has exercised reasonable care in the matter involved is usually a question for the jury. The standard of care is the conduct of a reasonably prudent person in such environments. The application of this rule must be left to the judgment of the twelve triers of the fact. It may be that Bands’ attention was so thoroughly riveted upon the approaching car as to make him unconscious of being so near the edge of the embankment, and that if his attention had been called to that matter by the plaintiff he would have avoided the slope. It may be also that the jury considered she was remiss in her duty in not warning him. We cannot say as a matter of law whether she was heedless or not. It must be left to the jury whether she failed in her duty as a reasonable person under the circumstances in not calling the attention of Mr. Bands to the danger of going over the embankment in his effort to avoid a collision with the other machine. Under the conditions disclosed by the record, the court was not in [651]*651error in giving an instruction on contributory negligence.

Negligence may be grounded in action or refusal to act, in speaking or failing to speak, all with reference to duty in the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
165 P. 1005, 84 Or. 643, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-portland-gas-coke-co-or-1917.