Boles v. Hotel Maytag Co.

265 N.W. 183, 221 Iowa 211
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 18, 1936
DocketNo. 43127.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 183 (Boles v. Hotel Maytag Co.) 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
Boles v. Hotel Maytag Co., 265 N.W. 183, 221 Iowa 211 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This is the second time this case has been before this court. Boles v. Hotel Maytag Co., 218 Iowa 306, 253 N. W. 515.

The writer of this opinion found it necessary to dissent in the former appeal. But when the opinion was adopted by a majority of this court, it became the law. The only right the minority has is to express its views, which right was exercised in this case. See dissenting opinion, 218 Iowa, page 317, 253 N. W. 520.

If this case were here on the record now before us as an original submission, the writer would find himself again compelled to dissent, but with the law of the case established by this court, it must be followed.

No good could be accomplished by repeating the facts and circumstances covering the claims made in this case. They are adequately and fully set out in the original opinion.

In the original submission this court held that appellant’s *213 decedent was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

The first hurdle that confronts the appellant is to show that she has produced sufficient new evidence to escape the conclusion reached in the former opinion. To do this, she relies upon two new theories. First, there is evidence in this record that Charles W. Boles was hard of hearing and that at the time that L. J. Dietz, the engineer of the hotel, told him that the safety device on the east door was out of order, the elevator was running; that on account of the fact that Boles was hard of hearing and because of the noise that was going on at the time that Dietz told him the safety device was out of order, it was for the jury to say whether or not Boles heard what Dietz told him on that occasion. There might be something to this claim if it were not for the fact that Dietz testified that at the time that he told Boles the safety device was out of order he (Dietz) pointed to the safety device, which was in plain view, and that at that time Boles was looking in that direction. The undisputed record shows that the safety device was so dismantled that even the ordinary layman would have known it was out of order by simply looking at it, whereas Boles, who was an expert electrician, would have had no trouble in ascertaining the fact that the device was not working.

The other evidence which the appellant relies upon is the testimony of the witness Frank Siddall, as follows:

“Mr. Boles went over to the west door and closed it and then he told me to go over and close the east door so we could move the elevator.”

It must be kept in mind that if the safety device with which the elevator was equipped was in working order, the platform of the elevator could not have been moved if the west door was open, nor could it have been moved if the safety device on the east door had been in working order if that door was open. The inference which the appellant would have drawn from the testimony offered is that appellant’s decedent did not know that the safety device on the east door was out of order, for if he had known he would not have said to Siddall, after closing the west door, “Close the east door so we could move the elevator,” for the elevator could have been moved without the door being closed, the safety device not being in working order. *214 The trouble with appellant’s theory is that the elevator should not have been moved, even if the safety device on the east door was out of order, with the east door open, because there was nothing to prevent any one from falling into the pit if the east door was open and the platform of the elevator was not there, there being no guard on the east door. So it is just as reasonable to believe that Boles was closing the east door to prevent any one from falling into the elevator pit, before he moved the platform of the elevator, as it is to believe that he was closing it with the thought in mind that it was necessary to do so before the elevator platform could be moved.

In view of the opinion of this court in the first case, we find no evidence offered here which would make it a jury question to decide whether or not the’ appellant’s decedent was guilty of contributory negligence. This was also the view of the distinguished and able trial judge who listened to the evidence in both trials in the lower court, and when the motion to direct was submitted to him in this case, said:

“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury: At the close of all of the evidence the defendant made a motion for a directed verdict; it is proper to tell you that this ease has been tried once before, and that I was the Judge that tried it, that it was appealed and the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the lower court; I have tried it again this time; it was reversed the former time because the Supreme Court held that as a matter of law Mr. Boles was guilty of negligence which contributed to his injury and death. The evidence is substantially the same this time as it was that time. I cannot see any difference, and therefore, I have sustained the motion for a directed verdict on the authority of the Supreme Court in the former case, so this case is over, and Mr. Birchnell will you step forward and sign the verdict that the court reporter has here ? ’ ’

The appellant further complains that the court erred in withdrawing and not considering the allegations of count II of the plaintiff’s petition, in which she alleged that the appellee was liable under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

This is a point that was not before this court on the former appeal, for the reason that the appellee was then appealing and the appellant made no complaint of errors committed against her since there had been a judgment entered in her favor. It *215 is the claim of the appellee that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply because the uncontradicted record shows that at the time the decedent was fatally injured the elevator involved was not under the exclusive control and management of the defendant, but instead, it was at least partly under the control and management of the decedent and R. D. Nicholson, an independent contractor and his employees.

In the case of Aita v. John Beno Co., 206 Iowa 1361, at page 1365, 222 N. W. 386, 387, 61 A. L. R. 351, this court said :

“Plaintiff invokes the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, ‘the thing speaks for itself.’ But this thing in question here does not speak for itself. The control of the pole is not shown to have been exclusively in Baron, as against the motions of the plaintiff and others. The instrumentality was not peculiarly, in that respect, within Baron’s control. It is manifest that no presumption of want of ordinary care on the part of Baron is raised by the facts shown in evidence. That the accident was the proximate result of such negligence, rather than numerous other possible causes, including the negligence of the plaintiff herself, is wholly conjecture. The facts shown are as consistent with other hypotheses, including that of plaintiff’s negligence, as with the theory of defendant’s negligence. The doctrine of res ipsa has no application to the facts of this case.”

Again in Larrabee v. Des Moines T. & A. Co., 189 Iowa 319, at page 324, 178 N. W. 373, 375, of the opinion this court said:

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265 N.W. 183, 221 Iowa 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boles-v-hotel-maytag-co-iowa-1936.