11 P.2d 1060 | Or. | 1932
This is an action to recover damages for injuries resulting from a collision between an automobile and a mixed interurban electric train owned and operated by the defendant company.
The gist of plaintiff's action is thus alleged in the complaint:
The defendant denied any negligence on its part and affirmatively alleged:
"1. He failed to maintain a reasonable outlook in his self-protection;
"2. He failed to exercise reasonable care in equipping his automobile with lights;
"3. He failed to comply with the statute of the State of Oregon in equipping his automobile with lights;
"4. He failed to exercise such reasonable care as would have ordinarily been expected from a reasonably prudent automobile driver under the circumstances there attendant."
These affirmative allegations of the answer were denied in the reply.
On these issues the cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff for $5,000. Defendant appeals, assigning as sole error the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict in its favor.
Counsel for defendant concede there is some evidence tending to show negligence on its part but urge that it appears as a matter of law that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. We do not so view the record. If the defendant railway company was operating this mixed train — composed in part of five empty logging cars — with red and green lights on the rear end of the passenger coach, but without any lights on the logging cars to indicate the rear end of the train, it was engaged in a dangerous enterprise. Any person of ordinary prudence who observed the red and green lights on the rear end of the passenger coach might well conclude that such markers indicated the rear end of the train. Under the circumstances, this feature would tend to divert the attention from *670
any impending danger of colliding with the empty logging cars and would, in fact, constitute a trap and a snare to those who used this highway crossing. In other words, we think there is substantial evidence tending to show that the negligence of defendant tended to lull the plaintiff into a false sense of security: Kirby v. Southern Pacific Co. et al.,
Counsel for defendant insist that if plaintiff's lights had been adjusted in conformity with the legal requirements, and he had exercised due care in looking, they would have disclosed the empty logging cars on the public highway. This contention is based solely upon the expert testimony of a state traffic officer who never tested the lights of the automobile in question. Plaintiff testified that his lights were "good." The traffic officer, in response to the question, "Now based upon your actual observations on the ground, of the grade as the grade exists there, taking into consideration the grade as you saw it, and all the conditions there as you saw them this morning, if a car was parked 65 feet away from the track on this ground, headed toward the track, and the lights were properly adjusted in accordance with the law of the state of Oregon, would a log truck, as shown by Defendant's Exhibit 2, be visible within the pattern of light on that railway crossing?" answered, "It would, sir." He, however, did not testify that, if these lights were properly adjusted, the beam of such lights — as distinguished from the pattern of the lights — would, from the place where plaintiff's car stopped, strike the connecting beam or reach of the logging truck which, it will be remembered, was 30 inches above the track. See *671 Clamper v. Philadelphia,
Assuming that plaintiff's lights were not adjusted in accordance with the statute, although the evidence relative to this matter is reasonably susceptible of different constructions, we are not prepared to say as a matter of law that any ordinarily prudent person would, in view of the circumstances as disclosed by the record in this case, have seen the logging cars on the track in time to avoid a collision. Even though it be conceded that plaintiff was negligent in failing to have his lights properly adjusted, it would still remain, under the facts of this case, a question for the jury to determine whether such negligence proximately contributed to the accident. Had it not been for the diverting influences involved in this case, such as the red and green lights on the motor coach, the absence of lighted markers on the logging cars, and the gleam of the lights of an automobile approaching from the opposite side of the track, the plaintiff might have been able to avoid striking this train. Who knows? At any rate, it is a question upon which reasonable minds might differ. Hence, the court did not err in submitting to the jury the issue of contributory negligence.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
BEAN, C.J., BROWN and CAMPBELL, JJ., concur. *672