Court Opinion

ID: 9550030
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-07 18:27:58.246082+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:21:12.387390
License: Public Domain

DENECKE, J.
Plaintiff obtained an award of damages for personal injuries suffered in an automobile accident. The defendant appeals.
The defendant was driving down the highway when he decided to turn around. He attempted to back into a private road and turn around. He was not able to complete the turn on his first go-around; so he drove out to the private road, stopped and then drove onto the highway intending to again back up. When the front end of defendant’s vehicle was either at the center line or past the center line of the highway, the plaintiff in his pickup came up from the right. The jury could have found the vehicles then collided, either at the center line or on plaintiff’s side of the highway.
*182The plaintiff charged the defendant with failure to keep a proper lookout, failure to keep his vehicle under control, and -failure to yield the right of way. OES 483.206 (2) provides:
“The driver of a vehicle entering a public highway from a private road or drive shall stop and yield the right of way to all vehicles approaching on such public highway.”
The trial court read this statute to the jury. It further instructed that a violation of this statute would consitute negligence in and of itself. The defendant excepted to this latter instruction upon the ground that the court failed to tell the jury that if the jury should find that the defendant acted reasonably, although in violation of the statute, he would not be negligent. Defendant cited Barnum v. Williams, 264 Or 71, 504 P2d 122 (1972), in support of his exception.
The essence of our decision in Barnum v. Williams, supra (264 Or at 79), was:
“* * * [I]f a party is in violation of a motor vehicle statute, such a party is negligent as a matter of law unless such party introduces evidence from which the trier of fact could find that the party was acting as a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances. * *
The plaintiff contends there was no evidence that the defendant acted reasonably. The defendant contends the jury could have found the defendant only intended to drive up to the center line and, therefore, he acted reasonably although he did not see plaintiff coming from defendant’s right; traffic coming from the right is required to be in the lane across the center line.
It is not necessary for us to decide this con*183troversy because the trial court did in effect instruct the jury that if defendant acted reasonably he was not negligent.
Immediately prior to instructing the jury that violation of the right-of-way statute would be negligence in and of itself, the trial court instructed:
“The statute, as I have mentioned, provides that the driver of a vehicle entering a public highway from a private driveway shall stop and yield the right-of-way to all vehicles approaching on such public highway.
“I instruct you that a vehicle is, approaching on a public highway whenever a reasonably prudent person in the position of the operator coming from the private drive would, or in the exercise of reasonable care should, reasonably have apprehended the probability of an accident if he or she continues on his or her course. * * *.”①
TMs particular statute has “reasonableness built into it.” As the trial court instructed, the statute is not violated if the defendant reasonably could not apprehend the probability of an accident with plaintiff if defendant came onto the Mghway from the private road. The trial court did not err in instructing the ¡jury.
The defendant also contends the trial court erred in refusing to admit into evidence the entire file of a workmen’s compensation claim plaintiff made in California. Plaintiff made a compensation claim for a low back injury incurred in February 1969. The automobile accident involved in this action was in October 1970 and an upper back and neck injury is *184claimed because of it. Defendant states in his; brief: “This exhibit [the entire compensation file] would have established a pre-existing low back injury which the plaintiff had contended was almost totally disabling.” The defendant was able to establish this since he was permitted to put in the most important parts of the compensation claim file, including plaintiff’s signed claim, plaintiff’s testimony before the referee, and the settlement of plaintiff’s claim for $6,700. These admitted exhibits fully revealed the claimed nature and extent of the injury. The portions of the file excluded only added insignificant detail to the basic evidence contained in the exhibits admitted. Any possible error in excluding the entire file was not prejudicial.
Defendant assigns as error the exclusion of testimony about plaintiff’s driving conduct a mile before the incident with defendant. In the offer of proof made after the objection was sustained, the witness stated that while rounding a slight curve the plaintiff straddled the center line and was “going pretty fast.” The witness testified that because of plaintiff’s driving, she drove her ear onto the shoulder in order to be safe.
Shoopman v. Long, 252 Or 341, 449 P2d 439 (1969), and Carter v. Moberly, 263 Or 193, 501 P2d 1276 (1972), are our latest two decisions on this issue of whether evidence of a party’s driving at some time and distance before the accident is admissible. We affirmed both decisions although the trial court in Shoopman admitted the evidence and the trial court in Garter rejected the evidence. Both decisions, however, hold that before such evidence can be admitted there must be other evidence from which the jury could find that the party’s conduct some time and distance before the *185accident continued up to at least shortly before the accident. In Shoopman v. Long, supra (252 Or 341), we upheld the admission of evidence of speed 12 miles before the accident because “it fits into a pattern with the other evidence and shows continued speed.” 252 Or at 343.
In the instant case there is no evidence of a pattern or a continuation of the conduct observed by the witness a mile from the accident. Under these circumstances the trial court was correct in denying admission of the evidence.
Affirmed.

 This instruction was given at the request of plaintiff and was taken from Raffaele v. McLaughlin, 229 Or 301, 305, 366 P2d 722 (1961).