Judges: Belt, Rand, McBride, Bean
Filed Date: 10/4/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision between an autotruck driven by the plaintiff and an interurban electric car operated by the defendant company. The accident occurred at a point where the county road intersects the railroad track at Glen Echo station about midway between Portland and Oregon City. It is a suburban district. The crossing, with which plaintiff was very familiar, is at grade and the track in this particular locality is straight for several hundred feet. It was daylight and there was nothing to obstruct the view of plaintiff, excepting a small waiting station near the track, and, as plaintiff says, some telegraph poles parallel with the track, approximately 90 feet apart. Reference to the following plat may be of assistance in understanding the statement of the case.
[EDITORS' NOTE: PLAT IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 520
Plaintiff was driving his four-ton Federal truck north on Abernathy Lane. He says that when he reached Steele Avenue and turned west thereon he looked in a northerly direction but did not see any train. This point of observation was approximately forty feet from the track. He drove on at the rate of five miles per hour, as found by the jury, and did not look again to his right for an approaching train until he had passed behind the waiting station and the front wheels of his truck were seven feet from the east rail of the track. He states that at this point he had a view of the track north for a distance of 200 feet and that he did not see any train approaching. Plaintiff thus describes what occurred thereafter:
"I turned my head and looked back towards Gladstone (to the south); I didn't see anything; by that time my wheels were in the center of the track, and I turned my head (to the north) and I saw a car that was about sixty or sixty-five feet from me; * *. The only thing to do was to get across the track if I could; I was going about six miles an hour."
Under the special findings of fact submitted, the jury found that the electric car, within 400 feet north of the point of collision, attained a speed of about 35 miles per hour. If this be true, when the plaintiff looked at a point 40 feet east of the track as he made the turn at the intersection of Abernathy Lane and Steele Avenue, the electric car must have been approximately 280 feet from the point of collision, since it was traveling at a rate of speed seven times that of plaintiff. Plaintiff says that the view was obstructed on account of a row of telegraph poles which appeared "almost like a wall" and that "sometimes you can't see a car coming." In this connection *Page 521 it is well to bear in mind that these poles were about 90 feet apart and that there could not have been more than four poles to obstruct the view had he looked when the car was 350 or 400 feet from the crossing. Photographic exhibits in evidence absolutely refute the testimony of plaintiff that these poles looked "like a wall." Of course they might have some semblance to a wall if plaintiff were looking at a greater distance down the track, assuming that he looked from the same angle.
On the authority of Morser v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Counsel for respondent contends that a different rule is applicable to an interurban electric railway operating in a suburban district than that applied to steam railroad lines which operate at high speed in comparatively open country. In the Goodman case the collision occurred between a truck and a railroad *Page 522
train at a grade crossing in an unincorporated village. The evidence disclosed that the train was traveling at the rate of 60 miles per hour. See statement of facts as reported in
Plaintiff seeks to uphold the verdict on the doctrine of the last clear chance. In stating the issues the trial court very properly eliminated this doctrine from the consideration of the jury, no objection being offered on the part of counsel for the plaintiff. Counsel is not permitted to abandon a theory in the Circuit Court and resurrect it on appeal in this court. There is no evidence in this case to warrant the application of this doctrine: Emmons v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Defendant was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor. It follows that the judgment of the lower court is reversed and that the action is dismissed.
REVERSED.
RAND, C.J., and McBRIDE and BEAN, JJ., concur.