Bowermaster v. Universal Producing Co.

266 N.W. 503, 221 Iowa 831
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1936
DocketNo. 43284.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 503 (Bowermaster v. Universal Producing 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
Bowermaster v. Universal Producing Co., 266 N.W. 503, 221 Iowa 831 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Richards, J.

Plaintiff-administrator seeks to recover damages on account of his decedent’s alleged wrongful death. The decedent, riding in an automobile as a guest of defendant Barns, received injuries when the automobile, being driven by Barns, collided with a truck. The remaining appellants were owners of the car and had consented to its use by Barns. Plaintiff claims the injuries received eventually caused decedent’s death-.

Section 5026-bl, Code 1931, provides that the owner or operator of a vehicle shall not be liable for any damages to any passenger or person riding in said automobile as a guest, unless damage is caused as the result of the driver of said motor vehicle being under the influence of intoxicating liquor or because of the -reckless operation by him of such motor vehicle. Decedent *832 having been a guest within the meaning of this statute, plaintiff seeks to recover on account of one of the exceptions contained in the section; that is, plaintiff seeks to recover because of the alleged reckless operation by Barns of the motor vehicle at the time decedent was injured. Whether the evidence warranted the submission to the jury of such issue of reckless- operation is raised by appellants’ assignments of error. In order to consider the question so raised, we proceed to summarize the pertinent evidence.

The accident happened at about 1:80 p. m. on May 7, 1933, about a mile west of the city of Fairfield, on primary highway No. 34, which had paving 18 feet in width, with dirt shoulders on either side. Earlier in the day there had been rain, and at the time of the accident the shoulders of the highway were muddy and the paving wet. Whether it was still raining at the time of the accident is in dispute. From a point a mile or more east of the place of the accident to a point a mile or more west thereof the highway in question extends east and west without any material curvature. The accident occurred about 175 feet east of a private driveway into the Stever farm home on the south side of the highway. At this place of the accident a Chevrolet one-ton truck, with a load of 3,100 pounds of coal, while proceeding toward the east, had stopped on account of exhaustion of its fuel supply. After stopping, it stood on the south half of the paving with room enough between the truck and the south edge of the paving to permit the driver to stand on the paving on the south side of the truck. The truck stood in this position for five minutes or a little longer, while its driver and his brother, the Smiths hereinafter mentioned, examined the ignition connections and then examined the fuel tank, finding it empty. In the meanwhile Barns was driving east on this highway in the direction of the stalled truck. It is the testimony of Barns and others who were in the car with him that the truck was observed as they came up a so-called hill from the west at 35 miles per hour; that Barns then reduced his speed, and at a point 15 feet east of the driveway was gradually veering to the north side of the pavement to go around the truck; that when, in making this movement, the left side of his car was over the black line far enough to see around the truck, a car was observed coming rapidly from the east on the north side of the pavement, its speed being too great to permit Barns to occupy the north side of *833 the pavement in passing the truck; that Barns thereupon applied his brakes and turned toward the south side of the pavement when at least 25 or 30 feet west of the truck; that the brakes then slid all foiu’ wheels on the wet paving; that this did not entirely stop the momentum- of the car, the result being that the car slid into the northwest rear corner of the truck and stopped, the center of the radiator of the car striking the wooden beam that extended lengthwise under the north side of the floor of the truck. All witnesses agree that the brakes slid the four wheels, and that the car hit the truck in the manner just stated, and stopped, but the appellee’s witnesses testify that the wheels slid for a less distance then 25 or 30 feet.

One of the Smiths, operating the truck, testified that, standing 30 or 40 feet west of the truck, he observed defendant’s car approaching at 50 or 55 miles per hour, when it was 100 feet west of the witness; that he then stepped on the paving, waved his arm up and down as a warning signal, and then stepped off the paving; that defendant’s car continued on at all times on the south half of the pavement, without slacking speed, until within 15 or 20 feet of the truck, when all the tires began to slide and the car slid into the truck. The other Smith testified that, standing on the pavement on the south side of the truck, he also moved his hand up and down, that defendant’s speed was 50 miles per hour, and that defendant’s car did not slacken its speed until within 10 feet of the truck. But this witness also testified that, when the defendant’s ear was no less than 20 feet from the truck, the witness, facing south, was proceeding south over the shoulder toward the ditch, and was still proceeding in that direction when he heard the noise of the collision. It would appear he did not in fact observe the last 20 feet of the course of the Barns car. When defendant’s car stopped upon striking the truck, its left rear wheel was north, and its left front wheel was south, of the center line of the paving. All witnesses so testify. The floor of the truck was about 4 feet above the paving, and by the force of the impact the car’s radiator was shoved under the floor of the truck and mashed down, the headlights were bent and their glasses broken, and a fender possibly dented. The truck was moved forward about 6 inches by the force of the collision. The only injuries to the defendant’s car was the masked-down radiator, the bent headlights and hood, and a possible denting of a fender, and broken glass in the headlights.

*834 The injuries to the truck involve a description of its structure. Two wooden 4x4 beams, about 8 feet long, had been bolted to the chassis. The bolts were through holes bored in the beams. These ran lengthwise and were about 4 feet apart. Four wooden crosspieces 2x2 in size were nailed to the beams. Inch boards were nailed to the crosspieces to form the bed of the truck. The boards were not tongued and grooved. The sides were inch boards about 12 inches high. There was no endgate. At the front end was an ordinary cab with a rear glass window and glasses in the doors and a glass windshield. The body had been made by the owner and his laborers in a coal yard. The impact of the collision raised the rear corner of the truck temporarily, broke the left 4x4’ beam, and shoved forward the left side of the floor of the truck, and the cab. After the collision, the cab was pushed back to its proper position and the truck proceeded to town under its own power. The only repairs needed consisted of a new beam and some new crosspieces for the floor of the truck. No glass in either the truck or the defendant’s car was broken except defendant’s headlights.

An important matter that is undisputed is the fact that, simultaneously with the collision between defendant’s car and the truck, another car proceeding west at a high rate of speed passed the place of the collision. In so doing this car occupied the north half of the paving. This car passed on for a considerable distance, stopped, and proceeded again without returning.

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 503, 221 Iowa 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowermaster-v-universal-producing-co-iowa-1936.