Band v. Reinke

288 N.W. 629, 227 Iowa 458
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 21, 1939
DocketNo. 44877.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 629 (Band v. Reinke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Band v. Reinke, 288 N.W. 629, 227 Iowa 458 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The plaintiff, Minnie Band, is a woman forty-seven years of age, and a sister of defendant’s wife. She was at the time of the injury living with the family of the defendant on a farm near Geneva, assisting her sister with the housework and taking care of Mrs. Reinke, who had been sick. '

On April 14, 1938, Mrs. Reinke, desiring to go to Ackley, obtained permission from her husband to take the car, but he insisted that the plaintiff go with her. Plaintiff stated that one of the purposes of her going to Ackley was to be with Mrs. Reinke, that they had some purchases to make, and were desirous of having their hair dressed and attending to some other matters. It was claimed in the petition and shown by the evidence that on the return trip from the town of Ackley, and while plaintiff’s sister, Hannah Reinke, was driving the automobile, a tire blew out, and the car first proceeded to the left, swerved from one side to the other, and finally to the right and into a ditch and overturned, injuring the plaintiff.

According to plaintiff’s evidence, the graveled road over which they were proceeding was about twenty-five feet wide. She testified that she heard a ’noise, and thinks she told her *460 sister that they ought to stop and see what was wrong, but the sister replied that it was probably just a stone below the ear. After hearing the noise, for a little while they did not notice anything unusual, but after proceeding 100 to 150 feet the car started to swerve from one side of the road to the other, and plaintiff states that they went back and forth across the road three or four times, and that the speed of the ear was about twenty-five miles per hour. The other witness, Mrs. Reinke, places the speed at thirty miles per hour. Plaintiff’s estimate of the distance from the place where the ear began to swerve until it landed in the ditch is about 200 feet. She states that Mrs. Reinke did not put on the brakes, and the witness did not notice her doing anything to try to keep the ear in the road, nor did she shut off the gas or the spark. Mrs. Reinke testifies to substantially the same effect, and states that she did nothing about stopping, did not put her foot on the brake, and did not shut off the gas or ignition. She states that she does not know that she did anything about the wheel, that she was excited and did not know what she did. On cross-examination she states that until the time the car started its erratic movements she “did not know for sure if it was a blowout.” Plaintiff was unacquainted with the operation and mechanism of automobiles.

An examination of the car showed that the back left tire was flat. Two witnesses, the defendant and the plaintiff’s nephew, estimate that the car could be stopped, if traveling thirty miles per hour, in from twenty to thirty feet.

The defendant answered the claim made by the plaintiff by denying generally, admitting that the tire upon defendant’s car sustained a blowout, that the car went into the ditch and plaintiff sustained injuries; but denying that there was any negligence on the part of the defendant or the driver of defendant’s car; alleging that this was an unavoidable accident and stating that the blowout of the tire mentioned in plaintiff’s petition created an emergency in which and as a result of which the driver of defendant’s car lost control thereof, and any acts or failures to act on the part of the driver thereafter were due to this emergency and were not the result of negligence. Defendant further alleges that the sole and only cause of the accident and plaintiff’s resulting damages, if any, was the blowout of the tire, which caused the defendant’s ear to go into the ditch.

*461 The plaintiff was a witness, and introduced also the testimony of her sister Mrs. Reinke, and her nephew, and the defendant W. A. Reinke.

It is not asserted that the plaintiff was a guest, and this question is not involved in the case.

Plaintiff in her petition assigns as grounds of negligence on the part of Hannah Reinke, which were submitted to the jury: (1) That she failed to make any effort to stop the automobile after the tire blew out, although there was plenty of time and opportunity to stop the automobile before it went into the ditch; (2) that she failed to make any effort after the tire blew out to gain control of the automobile; and (3) that she failed to have the automobile under proper control.

The defendant introduced no evidence. The cause was given to the jury on the instructions of the court, and a verdict was returned for the defendant. A motion for new trial and exceptions to instructions were duly filed, and were overruled on October 1, 1938. From the final judgment and order of the court overruling plaintiff’s motion for new trial and exceptions to instructions, plaintiff appeals.

[I] I. The errors complained of by plaintiff are based on instructions Nos. 11, 14 and 15 given by the court. Instruction No. 11 reads:

“You are instructed that after the said tire blew out, Hannah Reinke, the driver of the said ear, was duty bound under the law to exercise the care that a reasonably careful and prudent person would exercise under like and similar circumstances in controlling the operation of said automobile, and if, after the tire blew out, there was time for her to control said automobile, and if a reasonably careful and prudent person, taking into consideration at all times the fact that the tire had blown out, under the circumstances as shown by the evidence in this case, should and could have gained or kept control of said automobile, then in that case a failure upon her part so to do would be negligence and the defendant would be liable therefor.

“Under the law, Hannah Reinke was duty bound at all times to have her automobile under control unless conditions arose that would not permit her so to do. The blowing out of a *462 tire is a legal excuse to a driver for losing control of bis or her automobile unless, under the circumstances, after the blowing out, there is time and conditions for recovering control of the car, acting as a reasonably careful and prudent person would act under like and similar circumstances.

“You are to consider all the facts in this case and then, as guided by these instructions, determine as to whether or not Hannah Reinke was negligent in any one of the respects as charged by the plaintiff, and determine your verdict accordingly.”

The plaintiff objects to the second paragraph of such instruction for the reason, she alleges, that it withdraws from the jury the question of whether the driver was negligent in losing control, and decides this issue erroneously as a matter of law; plaintiff alleging that it was at the least a question for the jury whether the driver was negligent in losing control. Plaintiff further alleges that this erroneous instruction was clearly prejudicial and could not be cured by other instructions. Plaintiff urges that the action of the court in instructing the jury that a blowout is a legal excuse for a driver’s losing control was prejudicial. We doubt whether the instruction, read as a whole, sustains the plaintiff’s claim.

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Related

Bangs v. Keifer
174 N.W.2d 372 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1970)
Fagen Elevator v. Pfiester
56 N.W.2d 577 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1953)
Band v. Reinke
298 N.W. 863 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 629, 227 Iowa 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/band-v-reinke-iowa-1939.