Buchanan v. Hurd Creamery Co.

246 N.W. 41, 215 Iowa 415
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1932
DocketNo. 41590.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 41 (Buchanan v. Hurd Creamery 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
Buchanan v. Hurd Creamery Co., 246 N.W. 41, 215 Iowa 415 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

*416 Wagner, J.

— The appellant’s sole complaints are (1) that the court erred in overruling its motion for a. directed verdict, which was made at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and renewed at the close of all of the evidence, and (2) that the court erred in the giving of one of the instructions.

In the consideration of the first question, it will be necessary to refer somewhat in detail to the facts as disclosed by the evidence. At the time of the accident, on April 18, 1931, a truck owned by the defendant-corporation and operated by one of its employees was traveling south on South Avenue, where the accident occurred. The plaintiff and his wife, in a one-seated top buggy, proceeded from their home upon a diagonal road which leads into South Avenue, which is paved. They then traveled on South Avenue in a northerly direction toward the city of Council Bluffs. South Avenue is also known in the record as Highway Number 34. One of the horses was twenty years old and the other fifteen. South Avenue and the road running past the home of the plaintiff are much traveled and for a number of years the plaintiff has used this team from one to three or four times a week in driving back and forth upon said highway from his home to the city of Council Bluffs. The evidence discloses that this highway is used by automobiles about as much as the ordinary city street. This highway cuts the little farm owned by the plaintiff, upon which the horses for a number of years have been used, into two pieces. The uncontradicted evidence discloses that the team was gentle and entirely familiar with, and not afraid of, automobiles or trucks.

After reaching South Avenue, the plaintiff traveled in a northerly direction across a bridge on Mosquito Creek and then continued in the same direction, crossing the tracks of both the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Company and the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Company. The distance from the track of the latter Railroad Company to a curve in the road to the northwest, which leads into what is known in the record as Twenty-ninth Avenue is 12211/2 feet.

The plaintiff testified:

“After we crossed the tracks [of the Railroad Companies] the horses were walking. I never drove them any other way only in a walk. One of the horses was on the pavement and the other was on the side of the road, on the dirt shoulder upon the right-hand side. *417 After we had crossed the tracks there was no vehicle of any kind or description in front of me or behind me. I saw a truck coming when it came around the bend or curve on South Avenue there about 29th Avenue. When I saw the truck come around the bend we had traveled about 110 yards north of the Rock Island track. When I first saw the truck it appeared to be a new truck and had a fresh cover on it. It was a canvas cover. I observed not so much the truck as the noise it made. Sounded just like a man who knew how to handle a horse whip was popping it off as fast as he could, a sharp popping noise. It was, my best judgment, it was as loud as a rifle shot. I heard the noise before I saw the truck, — that is, I could see the top of the truck, the white cover, just before, up across 29th Avenue, just a short distance around the bend, I could see the top but not the truck. When it came around the bend it came toward me. I could see it was not a large truck, but apparently a new truck, and of course it was wider on each side of the driver’s cab, and the cover was tight. I am only speaking for one side of it, the side that I saw, the front end of the cover was tight, but ties slack, so that the wind got in under it and it billowed up and down just like water does in a wind. There was a stiff wind blowing that morning and this truck was driving right into it. When the truck came around the curve and came toward us one of the horses was so terrified that he was almost immovable, and the other horse was the other way, — he wanted to get away from there. He threw his head over his mate. The one tried to push the other away to the right,— that would be away from the truck, — and when it got right close to us they went into the ditch. From the- time it [the truck] came around the corner until I went into the ditch there was nothing between the truck and myself to obstruct my view, no other conveyance between us. There was not much time or space for action; only the one horse was right up in the air, as I told you, — he was bound to get away from there. He did not care where he went until he went into the ditch. They [the horses] were more than frightened, they were terrified. Q. State whether or not they [the horses] threw their heads into the air. A. They did.”

On cross-examination, the witness testified:

“After I noticed the horses looking for something I heard the truck before I saw it. It sounded like a sharp clear crack. At that time it was in sight, — the top of it was in sight, — that is, the low *418 top that covers the body of the truck. The first that I saw of the truck as it came around the corner was the body of the truck and the cab. Next, I saw this cover billowing up and down in the wind. I saw a dozen feet of the canvas, practically the whole length of the truck, so that it hung behind the truck a little. I could see it hang down and see it stick out from the truck. As the truck was coming toward me, I want to tell the jury that I could see the canvas sticking out to the rear of the truck. I could see the canvas behind the. cab. The box was, I suppose, as wide as they make them, seven feet, and it extended about a foot beyond the cab on either side, I think. At the time when I first noticed they [the horses] were acting a little, scary until after the accident. I sure was watching the team as close as a man could.”

On redirect examination, the plaintiff testified:

“I heard this noise and looked and as that is all higher ground than where this truck crosses the end of 29th Avenue, and come around the bend, and that is when I saw the top of the truck. There were no automobiles back of me that I could see. I did not see anything coming toward me except the truck. I did not see any objects anywhere other than this truck. There was no other moving object other than this truck in the highway in sight.”

The witness testified that about 110 steps north of the Rock Island track the horses went into the ditch, broke the buggy tongue from the buggy, upset the buggy, throwing it onto the fence and throwing him clear over the fence into the field. The team broke loose from the buggy and ran down the highway in a southerly direction. The truck approached from the north. This testimony is also corroborated by other witnesses, who testified in behalf of the plaintiff.

The witness Belthius testified in behalf of the plaintiff, that the truck had a canvas over the rack part of the body of the cab, which was blowing like a bellows; that it seemed like a bellows flapping-

The witness Nelson testified that he was traveling behind the truck as it proceeded south toward the place of the accident and that:

“The canvas was a covering over the top tied on both sides in front, on the left — loose on the left side, so he could throw it back *419 and get the cans out.

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 41, 215 Iowa 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-hurd-creamery-co-iowa-1932.