GODELL v. JOHNSON
Supreme Court of Oregon
September 28, 1966
November 9, 1966
418 P. 2d 505 | 244 Or. 587
Arguеd July 6, reversed and remanded September 28, petition for rehearing denied November 9, 1966
Philiр A. Levin, Portland, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Gerald D. Gilbert, Eugene, and Pozzi, Levin & Wilson, Portland.
Before MCALLISTER, Chief Justice, and PERRY, SLOAN, O‘CONNELL, GOODWIN, DENECKE and HOLMAN, Justices.
O‘CONNELL, J.
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. Defendant appeals frоm a judgment for plaintiff.
Plaintiff was injured while working in defendant‘s sawmill. He brought this action to recover damages for injuries allegedly resulting from a violation of the Employers’ Liability Law and the Basic Safety Code. Defendant denied negligence and аlleged that plaintiff was contributorily negligent.
The court found in favor of plaintiff on the question of liability but submitted to the jury in its advisory capacity the question of damages and contributory negligence. The jury was instructed to answer sрecial interrogatories as to the percentage of plaintiff‘s negligence, if any, and to compute plaintiff‘s damages by deducting from the amount of his total damage the percentage attributable to his contributory negligеnce.
The jury found that plaintiff was 20% contributorily negligent and that he was damaged in the amount of $108,048.43. The trial court disregarded the jury‘s finding of contributory negligence and awarded plaintiff $100,000 general damages and $8,048.43 special damages.
In numerous cases this court has held that when both parties move for directed verdicts they waive a jury trial. In at least two of these cases it is held that once the parties have made their respective motions the court is required to decidе the questions of fact as well as the questions of law.1 However, in
In the recent case of Bunch v. Davidson, 242 Or 635, 409 P2d 910 (1966), we held that there was no right to withdraw a motion for a directed verdict after the opposing party had made a similar motion and the trial court had ruled on the motions. Defendant argues that the Bunch case is distinguishable from the present case in that in Bunch the request for withdrawal of the motion came after the court had ruled on both motions, whereas here defendant requested withdrаwal of his motion before any ruling was made on either motion.
We need not consider the validity of this argument because, after careful study, we are of the opinion that the rule which imputes a waiver of jury trial from the mere filing of motions for directed verdicts is indefensible in any circumstance. The rule should therefore be abolished.
A motion for directed verdict, no matter by whom made, is designed simply to raise a question of law for the court.3 The movant in effect asserts that thе evidence adduced by the other party is not sufficient to state a claim (or a defense) and that there-
The rule of implied or imputed waiver has deservedly been described as “one of the oddest items to be found among the curios of the law.”5 It has been criticized on the ground that it “exchanges reality for rule, and this apparently without useful purpose.”6
The rule of implied waiver probably arose out of the unfortunate adoption of a similar rule applied in ancient practice when a party joined in a demurrer to the evidence. One who demurred to his opрonent‘s evidence could not introduce his own evidence and he forfeited the right to a jury trial. The case was withdrawn from the jury for reasons that had nothing to
An additional reason advanced by defendant for abolishing the rule of implied waiver is that if a party wishes to raise solely the question of the sufficiency of evidence adduced by the opposing party he can do so only at thе risk of having the case withdrawn from the jury. On the other hand, if a party desires to have his case submitted to the jury he must forego raising the question of the sufficiency of his opponent‘s evidence. This, it is contended, subjects a litigant to a choicе of action resting upon no rational basis. We agree.
For the foregoing reasons we have concluded that the rule of implied waiver must be abolished in this state. We adopt the following rule: When each party moves for a dirеcted verdict or when the opposing party “joins in” a motion for a directed verdict, and neither party is entitled to a directed verdict in his own right, it is the duty of the trial court to submit the cause to the jury unless both parties expressly waive jury trial or unless from circumstances other than the making or joining in the motion waiver can be implied in fact.8
It is also contended that defendant has already had, in effect, the benefit of a jury trial because the jury, in deciding that plaintiff‘s negligence was 20% of the entire negligence, necessarily must hаve concluded that defendant‘s negligence was a very substantial factor in causing plaintiff‘s injury. We do not agree. If the jury had been entirely free to decide who was at fault, it is possible that it would have found that defendant was without fault and that plaintiff‘s injury resulted solely from his own negligence.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
MOALLISTER, C. J., specially concurring.
I wish to emphasize that in Bunch v. Davidson, 242 Or 635, 409 P2d 910 (1966), defendant‘s motion to with-
I concur in the majority opinion.
SLOAN, J., dissenting.
The result of this case is wrong. The record shows that the trial court first ruled on defendant‘s motion to withdraw his request for a directed verdict. The court refused this and that ruling is now reversed. However, the judge then stated that he would pass on the motions for a directed verdict and ruled in favor of plaintiff‘s motion. It must be remembered thаt the court‘s ruling only decided the issue of defendant‘s liability. The plaintiff‘s motion to direct the jury that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence was denied and the court submitted that issue to the jury with careful instructions. The evidence is convincing that there was fault on the part of defendant. Accordingly, in an Employers’ Liability Act case, plaintiff was entitled to a verdict in some amount and the directed verdict in his favor on the question of the liability of defendant was properly allowed. So too, was the denial of plaintiff‘s motion on contributory negligence.
There was some evidence that plaintiff was negligent. And, had this been the usual tort action, plaintiff would not have been entitled to a directed verdict. In that casе a finding by the jury of contributory negligence would have been a complete bar to plaintiff‘s recovery. This is not so, of course, in an Employers’ Liability Act case. The only issue for the
It should be our order that the case be remanded to reinstate the jury‘s verdict.
