DocketNumber: 9710-07969; A109205
Judges: Brewer, Landau, Schuman
Filed Date: 12/19/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
In this personal injury case, the jury found plaintiff, a bicyclist, 55 percent at fault for a collision with a pickup truck driven by defendant Bixel.
The accident giving rise to this litigation occurred on Swan Island, where both plaintiff and defendant worked. Part of the island contains buildings and paved roads in a grid pattern. Plaintiff, returning to his place of work after using a restroom, mounted his bicycle at a point in the middle of a block. Heading south, he attempted to cross a wide street running east and west. Defendant, driving south in a pickup truck, was turning left onto the east-west street from a cross street. The pickup and bicycle collided.
Plaintiff sued defendant for damages resulting from injuries sustained in the collision, alleging that defendant was negligent in “operating his vehicle at a greater rate of speed than was reasonable under the circumstances,” failing to maintain a proper lookout, failing to maintain proper control over his vehicle, and failing to yield the right of way. In his answer, defendant asserted five allegations of contributory negligence. After the evidence had been received, plaintiff moved to strike the allegations of contributory negligence; the court granted the motion and, without objection, permitted defendant to substitute two new allegations: that plaintiff failed to exercise his right of way with due regard for the surroundings and safety of others and that plaintiff failed to exercise his right of way in a reasonable manner. The case was submitted to the jury in that posture, again without objection. The jury returned a special verdict finding that plaintiff was negligent, that defendant was negligent, and that plaintiffs negligence exceeded defendant’s by 55 percent
Defendant raises two arguments before this court. First, he maintains that by neither requesting a peremptory jury instruction that his negligence could not exceed 50 percent as a matter of law, nor objecting to the verdict before the judge discharged the jury, plaintiff waived any objection to the verdict as rendered. Second, he maintains that, even if the objection were properly preserved and raised by the motion for a new trial, the court erred in granting that motion. Because we agree with defendant’s second point— the trial court erred in granting the motion for a new trial— we do not reach the first.
A jury’s allocation of fault is a fact we cannot reexamine unless we “can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support” it. Or Const, Art VII (Amended), § 3. Thus, in cases involving determinations of contributory negligence or relative fault where
“the decisive issue is the sufficiency of the evidence [,] * * *
“ * * we do not weigh the evidence. We are required to accept as being true all evidence and inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party who prevailed before the jury. This necessitates resolving any conflicts in the evidence in favor of that party.’ ” Daskalos v. Kell, 280 Or 531, 534-35, 571 P2d 141 (1977) (quoting Jacobs v. Tidewater Barge Lines, Inc., 277 Or 809, 562 P2d 545 (1977); accord Bruneau v. Curtis, 144 Or App 498, 500, 927 P2d 634 (1996).
Our inquiry, then, is not whether there is substantial evidence supporting the jury verdict, but whether there is any evidence supporting it. Daskalos, 280 Or at 536; Bruneau, 144 Or App at 500.
This case, as described above, involved a collision between a bicycle ridden by plaintiff and a pickup truck
Some competent evidence, therefore, supported the jury’s verdict. The trial court erred in granting plaintiffs motion for a new trial.
Reversed.
Bixel is part owner of defendant Marine Propulsion Services, Inc. References to defendant are to Bixel, and vice versa.