Zahara v. Brandli

94 P.2d 718, 162 Or. 666, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 108
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 718 (Zahara v. Brandli) 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
Zahara v. Brandli, 94 P.2d 718, 162 Or. 666, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 108 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

This is an action by Gertrude Zahara, plaintiff, against G. Brandli, defendant, for thé recovery of damages for personal injuries received in an automobile accident, which occurred a short distance north of the city of Salem on what is known as the Chemawa cut-off road on October 1, 1936.

The cause was tried to the court and a jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff, at the time, operated a fruit stand on the Pheific Highway a short distance north of where the Chemawa cut-off road leaves the highway. This road leaves the Pacific Highway about three miles north of the city of Salem, angling away from the highway to the west and north. A short distance from the place where it leaves the highway it turns sharply at right angles to the southwest. This road is not paved, but is graveled for a width of about twenty-five feet, with a shoulder covered with grass and ferns along the east side, and, as far as shown by the photographs exhibited in evidence, the west side of the road was about the same.

Plaintiff lived a short distance west and south from the right angle curve of the Chemawa cut-off road. On the evening in question, plaintiff left her fruit stand on the Pacific Highway, and cut across the point of land formed by the intersection of the Pacific Highway and the Chemawa cut-off road, a short distance south of where the accident occurred.

*669 The photographs exhibited in evidence were taken just prior to the trial and some of the conditions shown in the pictures differ slightly from those prevailing at the time of the accident.

When plaintiff reached the Chemawa road she started north thereon on the east, or right, side of the road at about the time the defendant was returning from the city of Salem, driving an automobile. As he turned off the Pacific Highway and onto the Chemawa road, plaintiff stepped to the side of the road, variously estimated from two to four feet, and plaintiff claims she was close to the fence on the east side of the road. Defendant proceeded north on this road, driving at about the center of the same. When he reached the place close to where plaintiff was standing, another car rounded the curve, traveling toward Salem. The position occupied by plaintiff was something like seventy feet south of said turn. When this car traveling toward Salem rounded the curve defendant moved over to the right side of the road. Plaintiff contends that he swerved sharply; defendant contends that he did not. A part of his car came out on the shoulder where the plaintiff was standing and struck her and knocked her over, inflicting personal injuries upon her, bruising the hind part of her left leg and breaking her right leg near the knee.

Defendant states that he did not see the plaintiff at the time and that he did not know he had struck her, that he thought he had struck something but he did not know what it was until he heard someone scream and then he stopped.

Plaintiff charges defendant with negligence in failing to keep a lookout and in turning sharply to the *670 right and .striking her, without giving any signal-. Defendant states that he did not see the plaintiff and that he. did not give any signal by sounding the horn. He admits that he struck her but says that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in that she failed to .maintain any lookout,, that she was using the wrong side of the highway and that she should have foreseen the danger and avoided the accident, that it was hazy and growing dark and visibility was poor,' and that she was dressed in dark clothing and carried or displayed nothing to give any warning of her position on the highway.

Plaintiff states that there are some minor matters for consideration and some major questions to be disposed of, that the two major propositions, presented to the court by this appeal are, first, whether the court should have withdrawn from the consideration of the jury the charge of contributory negligence set forth in the answer, namely, that plaintiff was walking on the wrong side of the road, with the traffic, rather than against it as required by statute. Plaintiff contends that this should have been withdrawn for the reason that there was no evidence in the case to show that plaintiff was so walking, that what she might have been doing some time prior to the accident should not have entered into the consideration of the jury, and that the ..record is uneontradicted that at the time, and for some little time before the accident, she took a position entirely beside the road and was standing still.

Margaret Zahara, the daughter-in-law of plaintiff, shortly before the time of the accident, was riding in the front seat of the car rounding the turn driven by *671 her husband, Mike Zahara. Her testimony was in part as follows:

“Q. And as you rounded this curve did you see your mother-in-law, Mrs. Gertrude Zahara, plaintiff in this case?

A. Yes, I saw her.

Q. Where was she at that time?

A. She was walking up the side of the road.

* * # # - #

Q. Please correct me if I misunderstood you, Mrs, Zahara. When you came around the curve, you saw Mrs. Zahara and she was walking along the side of the road?

A. Yes, as I remember it she was walking. I saw her before I saw the car.

Q. She was walking north on the side of the road, she wasn’t by the fence then, was she?

A. No, she stepped back.”

The first assignment of error is that the plaintiff says there is manifest error upon the record in this: The court erred when admitting the testimony and permitting the cross-examination of plaintiff, as shown by Exception No. 1 of the Bill of Exceptions. It appears that the deposition of plaintiff was taken before the trial and upon the trial the following question was asked her in regard to the deposition:

• “Q. If the court reporter has you saying the weather was nice, she was mistaken?

A. I know it wasn’t raining, but I don’t know.”

An objection by plaintiff was overruled and plaintiff reserved an exception. The examination continued:

“Q. If the court reporter has you in this deposition saying that the weather was nice, this deposition taken last Tuesday, the court reporter was mistaken, is that correct?

A. Well, I didn’t mean nice, it wasn’t raining.”

*672 There was no prejudicial error in the ruling of the conrt in regard to the cross-examination. It was not an important matter.

Error is assigned in the admission of testimony of Mrs. Bertha Brandli, wife of defendant. When she was on the witness stand and, during the direct examination, the following proceedings were had:

“Q. What happened then?

Mr/ Winslow: Objected to as irrelevant and immaterial.

The Court: What do yon claim for that?

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 718, 162 Or. 666, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zahara-v-brandli-or-1939.