Jensen v. Salem Sand & Gravel Co.

Citation192 Or. 51,233 P.2d 237
PartiesJENSEN v. SALEM SAND & GRAVEL CO.
Decision Date27 June 1951
CourtSupreme Court of Oregon

James Arthur Powers, of Portland, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the brief were Sam Van Vactor, of The Dalles, and James M. Burns, of Portland.

Alan F. Davis, of Portland, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief was Kenneth M. Abraham, of Hood River.

Before BRAND, C. J., and ROSSMAN, LATOURETTE, WARNER and TOOZE, JJ.

LATOURETTE, Justice.

Plaintiff (respondent), a pregnant woman, recovered a $7,500 judgment against defendant (appellant) by way of damages arising out of an injury she sustained while crossing a sewer ditch which had been excavated but partially refilled by defendant.

During the course of the trial, defendant moved for an involuntary nonsuit and a directed verdict on grounds that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Both motions were denied. After the verdict was returned, defendant moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the above grounds, which motion was also denied. Whereupon the present appeal was taken.

Defendant's sole assignment of error is: 'The Court erred in denying Defendant-Appellant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because Plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.'

Under the above assignment, defendant makes the following point: 'Plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law for proceeding in the dark on a street which she knew was under repair and in which a ditch had been excavated.'

To properly arrive at a decision in this matter, it is necessary to consider the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff. The evidence discloses that defendant over a period of several weeks prior to the accident was installing a sewer system on State Street in Hood River, a portion of which extended in front of and parallel to plaintiff's residence and being five to five-and-one-half feet in depth and several feet wide. Before the work was commenced, because of the fact that the garage was too small, the family automobile was customarily parked on the gravel shoulder of the street in front of plaintiff's house. While the work was in progress, she would leave the car at the end of the block quite some distance from the place where she fell and proceed by safe passage to her home. On the day of the accident before going to her doctor's office about 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon, she noticed that the defendant was filing in the ditch on the block in front of her property. A portion of her testimony regarding her observation of this work follows:

'Q. How far, to the best of your knowledge, had they filled in this ditch? A. Well, just right down in front of our house.

'Q. To the front of your home? A. Yes.

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* * *

'Q. In the afternoon as you walked up the street, what did you observe at two thirty, going down to Doctor McCain's office? A. The men were working there then. They had a bulldozer, pushing dirt, filling in this big ditch.

'Q. They were filling in the ditch along the house there? A. Yes.

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* * *

'Q. You stated it [the ditch] was partly closed and partly open? A. I mean the ditch had been partly closed down as far as in front of our house, and they were still working; it was partly closed and partly open.

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* * *

'Q. When you left you judge that was open? A. Yes, they were working that way.'

Although a portion of State Street to the east had been barricaded by defendant with appropriate lights, residents were permitted to proceed along the street for the purpose of reaching their respective residences. On the day plaintiff had observed the backfilling of the ditch, she, riding with her husband in his automobile, started home between 7:30 and 8:00 o'clock at night, with the car lights burning, from the restaurant where she was employed. As to plaintiff's movements prior to the accident, we have her following testimony:

'Q. As you drove up to your home, with your lights you could observe that that [the ditch] had been filled in; is that correct? A. That's right.

'Q. You did not observe a hole or ditch? A. No, I didn't.

* * *

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'Q. You came on down the street. Where did you park your car--exactly? A. We pulled right in front of the house, where we had always parked our car previous to this work.

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'Q. Did you observe a large mound of earth there at your driveway at that time? A. There was mounds of earth, excess dirt that they didn't use; they pilled it to be moved away.

'Q. Was there quite a considerable mound of earth there? A. I noticed some dirt.

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'Q. Had you observed any banks of dirt coming down State street, or did you observe any open holes as you were driving up the street that night? A. Coming up the street we saw extra dirt that they didn't use in their fillings that was mounded up, but I didn't see any holes at all.

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'Q. Where was that mound of earth with reference to the excavation which you fell into? A. It was at the side of it.

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'Q. You knew those piles were there? A. Yes.'

According to plaintiff's testimony, the accident itself occurred as follows:

'Q. Relate how you drove, what you did? A. Well, as if customary, we went up Oak street to 13th, cut through the Park, and I remarked to my husband: 'I am sure glad this is all filled in, because we can drive down in front of the house now.' We pulled in, parked the car, and I stepped out of the car. As I stated, it was very dark, and the next thing I knew he was helping me out of this hole.

'Q. Do you recall, as you got out of the car to walk, did you take any steps at all, Mrs. Jensen? A. I believe I took a few steps toward our driveway.

'Q. Did you step into the dirt or did you step into the hole, or what? A. First I stepped into this loose dirt, then I was just gone. There was nothing to grab on to, or anything. When my foot gave way in this loose dirt, I just was thrown right into this hole.

'Q. Where there any barricades on this hole at all? A. None whatsoever.

'Q. Any lights of any kind, any red lights at all? A. No lights.

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* * *

'Q. * * * Will you explain, after you went in the ditch, do you recall the relative position you were in? Could you get out yourself? A. No, I couldn't get to my feet because my feet were in this loose dirt, and the main part of my body was down in the bottom of the hole.'

The photographs introduced in evidence show that the dirt had been filled in in front of plaintiff's driveway, except that portion where the hole was. Plaintiff's husbank placed a mark on a photograph of the scene of the accident and in his testimony said: 'A. * * * She would come out of the door of the car approximately there and walked over and up through the passageway; that would be the head of the car in here.' And further: 'Q. At this occasion, as you drove down State street, did you observe any difference in the construction? A. Nothing, but there was just a few small piles of dirt, and the rest of it had evidently been pushed into the hole; and it was open up to my home there, and I pulled over as I had normally done before.'

Defendant's witness, Mr. Hobson, the county surveyor, testified in regard to the ditch as follows:

'Q. How deep was the sewer ditch along there? A. It averaged from five to five and a half feet.

'Q. After the pipe had been laid, what was the size of the pipe? A. The pipe was a 12 inch pipe on the inside, making it about a 14 or 15 inches on the outside.

'Q. If the pipe was covered to the top, if the ditch was 5 to 5 1/2 feet deep, then you would subtract that 14 inches after the pipe was in there? A. Yes. In the neighborhood of four feet, I would say.

'Q. What can you tell the jury about the soil, whether it is sandy or otherwise? A. It is a rather light, sandy soil.

Q. In making the sewer connections, was it necessary to leave certain areas open to connect up the sewers, such as in front of the Jensen house? A. We found it necessary for a short time to leave sections open till the connection could be made to the house sewers.

'Q. I will hand you Plaintiff's exhibit F which shows the opening out in front of the Jensens in the street; is that a fair representation of the way those openings were? I have in mind the earth. I think engineers call it the 'angle of repose.' Is there dirt on a slant from each end of that point? A. Yes. On the far end, it looks like the excavation has been completely back-filled, and down farther, I see no evidence of pipe, so, I take it, the pipe is covered. But I can't tell from that how much it is covered over the pipe.

'Q. You talk about the 'angle of repose'--the way the dirt slides in and slants. What is the angle of repose for dirt on the ends? A. Well, no, I could not call that an angle of repose, because the dirt was usually tramped in and packed, and that could be made most any angle. Almost vertical. Naught.

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'Q. * * * On the 19th day of October, Mrs. Jensen testified that they were filling that street up; do you know anything about that? A. They might have been filling it.

'Q. At that time? A. That's right.

'Q. Filling up the hole? A. They could have been.'

Ordinarily, the question of contributory negligence is a jury question, and rarely will courts find that contributory negligence exists as a matter of law. When a given state of facts is such that reasonable men may fairly differ upon the question as to whether a plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence, the matter becomes a jury question. Whether or not the given act may be negligence or not negligence depends upon the circumstances, for, as said in 1 Beven on Negligence, 3d ed., at p. 9, 'it is not the act that connotes the negligence, but the circumstances.' As quoted by Mr. Justice Rand in Rice v. City of Portland, 141 Or. 205, 213, 7 P.2d 989, 991, 17 P.2d 562, from Degg v. Midland Ry....

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4 cases
  • Garland v. Wilcox
    • United States
    • Oregon Supreme Court
    • January 27, 1960
    ...Finance Co. v. Kliks, 1957, 210 Or. 288, 310 P.2d 1103; Shelton v. Lowell, 1952, 196 Or. 430, 249 P.2d 958; Jensen v. Salem Sand & Gravel Co., 1951, 192 Or. 51, 233 P.2d 237; Edvalson v. Swick, 1951, 190 Or. 473, 227 P.2d 183. The evidence viewed in that light would establish that defendant......
  • Moudy v. Boylan
    • United States
    • Oregon Supreme Court
    • December 23, 1959
    ...question for jury determination and was properly submitted to the jury. Loibl v. Niemi, 214 Or. 172, 327 P.2d 786; Jensen v. Salem Sand & Gravel Co., 192 Or. 51, 233 P.2d 237; White v. Keller, 188 Or. 378, 215 P.2d 986; Doty v. Southern Pacific Co., supra; Cooper v. North Coast Power Co., 1......
  • Edwards v. Criteser
    • United States
    • Oregon Supreme Court
    • September 6, 1974
    ...negligence. It is the circumstances, and not the act itself, that constitutes contributory negligence. Jensen v. Salem Sand & Gravel Co., 192 Or. 51, 58--59, 233 P.2d 237 (1951); See also Dawson v. Payless for Drugs, 248 Or. 334, 341, 433 P.2d 1019 It is an established rule that contributor......
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    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • April 23, 1979
    ...what actions by the therapist would constitute the exercise of reasonable care under the circumstances. See Jensen v. Salem Sand and Gravel Co., 192 Or. 51, 233 P.2d 237 (1951). The court instructed the jury at the "Ladies and gentlemen, ultimately, when this case is submitted to you, I wil......

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