161 P. 251 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant moved for a judgment of nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove a case sufficient to be submitted to the jury. The overruling of this motion is assigned as one of the errors committed by the trial court. A review of the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff therefore becomes necessary.
"Without dispute it appears that the defendant with-two friends was riding in this automobile on Hawthorne Avenue following a “no-stop” train of two street-cars running east on Hawthorne Avenue and thence south on Fiftieth Street. The accident occurred on the latter street in the outskirts of Portland, where some of the cross-streets had not been improved. As the train came to a switch it slackened its speed, and the defendant turned out to the left as though to pass it. After passing the switch the trainmen increased the speed. The witnesses say that the automobile gained upon the train, and that this continued for about a block and a half when the accident occurred. All the witnesses testifying upon the question of speed gauged that of the automobile by reference to that of the train. H. B. Spaulding, a witness for the plaintiff, answering the question, “What rate of speed was the automobile making at that time?” said:
“The cars traveled from 15 to 20 miles an hour at that hour of the evening; and the automobile was going fast enough to pass the car. It was gaining on the car passing it on the left side.”
“Well, to my best judgment he had followed us several blocks before we got to Fiftieth Street, where we turned. There he was half a car behind us, to my best memory; he was straddling the rail with his car. I think we slowed down at Fiftieth Street to open the switch, make the turn, and he also slowed down. After we turned on Fiftieth Street, he came right alongside of this back vestibule. I was chewing, and I came near spitting in his car a couple of times. He ran along a few feet, I didn’t pay much attention to it. Presently, he got out of sight alongside the car, and the next I knew the car got a bump, and I looked out to see what it was. I didn’t know what the accident was then.”
He said further:
“I should judge the ear was— The rate of speed is kind of a hard thing to solve out; somewhere in the neighborhood of 14 or 16 miles; might have been 18 miles; might have been less; might have been more or less; might not have been over 12 miles.”
This witness was accustomed to riding on the car about 300 days in the year, and was familiar with the rate of speed. The motorman in charge of the train testified on behalf of the plaintiff that until he came to the frog at the crossing track he was traveling at the rate of probably 12 or 14 miles an hour, and when he came to cross over to the other track he slowed up to 7 or 8 miles. He says that he then speeded up to between 12 and 15 miles an hour, “maybe a little more, maybe a little less.” It is also without contradiction in the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff that the child stood on the sidewalk behind a telephone pole, where he was entirely out of sight of the defendant.
“The little Sorsby boy was standing beside the post on the sidewalk at the time the car was opposite. He had been on the bank a moment before and stepped down on the sidewalk.”
He declared that the rear fender of the automobile struck the child. The witness Doan was walking along the east side of the street going south at the time, and says:
“I noticed a couple of poles, saw some children playing around the poles, and I saw a little girl up a couple of feet on a telegraph pole; that is, before I got within 15 feet of the child. As I came up the walk I noticed this little girl climb up and down the pole, or on it. I also noticed some one run across the street from the opposite side, just ahead of the street-car and step up onto the curb, and as the street car went by, the tail end passed, I saw this child start out in the street, that is, just stepped out [witness claps his hands together], the automobile struck him.”
He testified:
“I didn’t see the automobile, only just as it struck the child and was gone. It was done as quick as-that.”
He said the child just jumped off the sidewalk to go-across. He stated he thought he saw the child cross the street from the west side, and then continued:
“I saw him step up behind the post. Whether he-came clear across the street or not, I don’t know, but my supposition was he ran across ahead of the streetcar, and stepped up behind the post, and when the car went by he started to go back.”
This question was propounded to him:
*351 “And it is still your judgment that from where the hoy was standing that Mr. Benninghoven, driving the automobile, could not see him until he ran out into the street?”
He answered:
“It is. He couldn’t see him until the boy stepped out from the pole. I couldn’t see him from where I was.”
The testimony also shows that at the very moment of the accident the defendant turned his car to the right, away from the child, so that he collided with the train, and that it was the rear fender of the automobile that struck the little fellow.
Recurring to the allegation of negligence, we find it. couched in these terms:
“The defendant was carelessly and negligently driving said automobile at a high rate of speed, and operating said automobile in a careless and negligent manner, and carelessly and negligently failed to sound any signal when approaching the said Sherman Stanley Sorsby.”
Under Section 2 of Chapter 174 of the Laws of 1911, known as the Motor Vehicle Law, certain specifications are laid down regarding the speed of vehicles-Subdivision 11 reads thus:
“In passing railroad or street-cars operated in any city, town or village in this state, vehicles shall be so-operated upon that side of said street or railroad car with due care and caution that the safety of passengers boarding or alighting from such street or railroad car shall be fully protected, and for that purpose*352 said vehicle shall he brought to a stop, if necessary, but upon the other or left side of said street or railroad car, should there be a clear passage, said vehicle shall be permitted to so increase its speed for the necessary distance to negotiate a safe clearance between said street or railroad car and said vehicle so desiring to pass, and the rate of speed requisite and necessary so to do shall not be deemed to be an excessive rate of speed, having due regard to the speed of said railroad or street-car.”
Subdivision 17 is as follows:
“The rate of speed on all streets, roads and highways of this state shall be a reasonable speed up to and not exceeding twenty-five miles an hour, but any speed in excess of twenty-five miles an hour upon any road or highway of this state shall be an unreasonable speed and is prohibited by this act.”
If the plaintiff had alleged the rate of speed allowed by the city law, and had met the general issue on that point by introducing the ordinance with proof that the defendant was going faster than the permissible maximum, the result would have been a situation to which could have been applied the doctrine of the majority opinion in Kalich v. Knapp, 73 Or. 558 (142 Pac. 594, 145 Pac. 22, Ann. Cas. 1916E, 1051), to the effect that violation of a city ordinance, although it conflicts with an act of the legislative assembly is evidence of negligence. In default of these conditions, however, that case does not apply, and the present controversy is judicable by the state statute mentioned.
The highest rate of speed attributed to the streetcar by any witness is found in the testimony of Mr. Spaulding that the car traveled 15 to 20 miles an hour, and that the automobile was gaining on it. The enactment referred to says that the speed requisite and necessary to pass the car shall not be deemed to be an
The way was clear to the driver of the aatomobile. He was doing what the statate expressly permits him to do, and he was doing it in a lawfnl manner withont any saggestion of the presence of the boy. The little fellow stepped oat into the street, and had bat 3 or 4 feet to traverse before he collided with the defendant’s vehicle. Considering the matter most favorably for the plaintiff, it is plain that, in order to avoid the collision, the defendant woald have had to travel at least the length of his machine before the child covered the 3 or 4 feet. Under sach circamstances, with the appliances at hand, no human agency coaid have stopped the aatomobile in time to prevent the accident. The defendant did everything within his power to avoid the child, taming his car so far to
The case presented is like the hypothesis suggested by Mr. Chief Justice Bean in Wallace v. Suburban Ry. Co., 26 Or. 174, 177 (37 Pac. 477, 478, 25 L. R. A. 663)
“If we assume, as does the argument for the defendant, that the child, without the fault or negligence of' the defendant, suddenly and unexpectedly appeared on the track immediately in front of the car, we might' conclude that her death was an unavoidable accident, and that the rate of speed would be immaterial, for upon such an appearance upon the track no precaution could have prevented the accident.”
In that case the court refused to apply the principle-thus announced by the learned judge because the facts, were in controversy. Here there is no dispute on that score. It is unquestioned that the child hitherto concealed by the pole suddenly and unexpectedly stepped out into the street evidently alongside of, and not in front of, the automobile and collided with the back fender. So far as the speed is concerned, the pity is that the defendant was not driving at a much greater rate; for then he might have escaped the baby’s-impact.
On the subject of failure to give an alarm Mr. Chief' justice Magie, writing in Graham v. Consolidated Traction Co., 64 N. J. Law, 10, 13 (44 Atl. 964, 965), says:
“The clear evidence is that the boys, in their play on the sidewalk, gave no indication that they intended to cross the track. No signal nor warning as to them’, would have-been appropriate or required. When they rushed from the sidewalk and ran directly in front of*355 the oar, the motorman made every effort to arrest the motion of the car. The car was visible and visibly moving; the signal by the gong would have been of no avail._ From the evidence an inference of failure of duty in this respect could not reasonably be drawn.”
In that instance the decedent was a boy of four years and four months of age whom the motorman saw playing on the sidewalk adjacent to the street on which the car was passing. The present case is much stronger because the little fellow was concealed from the view of the defendant and gave no intimation that he was moving, or likely to move. In Stahl v. Sollenberger, 246 Pa. 525 (92 Atl. 920), a little boy suddenly ran from the footway on a bridge into the driveway provided for vehicles and was killed, The court said:
“The defendant cannot fairly or reasonably be charged with negligence in failing to stop his automobile and avoid the accident, unless it appeared that the boy entered the roadway at a sufficient distance from the automobile to permit of its being stopped before the collision occurred. If the boy suddenly left the footway, at a place where the driver had no reason to expect him to do so, and ran directly in front of the automobile, the result could hardly have been other than disastrous, even though the machine had been moving at a very reasonable rate. * # But in the present case, with no evidence that the child appeared upon the roadway in front of the car at any appreciable distance ahead of it, and with no circumstance shown that would tend to suggest to the driver, prior to the happening of the accident, the probability of the boy leaving the footway, or getting into danger upon the driveway, we think the trial court was right in holding that there was not sufficient proof of any negligence causing the accident, on the part of the defendant, to justify the submission of the question to the jury.”
In brief, the allegation of excessive speed is not proven when measured by the motor vehicle law, which is the legislative standard. Owing to the admitted suddenness with which the child appeared from his concealment behind the pole, the accident was unavoidable, and the rate of speed therefore became immaterial, because, no matter how fast or slow the defendant was traveling, there was no time after he discovered the child that he could have stopped the car soon enough to avoid hurting him. On the contrary, the evidence for the plaintiff affirmatively shows that by swerving to the right all was done that was humanly possible under the circumstances to prevent injury to the boy. Considering the statute and giving to the plaintiff every inference that can be drawn from his own testimony, he has not proven any legal blame against the defendant. The loss of his sprightly little son is no doubt a severe affliction to the parent, but it does not justify the visitation of a money judgment upon the defendant. It is unnecessary to consider the other questions raised by the appeal.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, with directions to enter a judgment of nonsuit in favor of the defendant. Reversed With Directions.