Caplan v. Reynolds

191 Iowa 453
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 453 (Caplan v. Reynolds) 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
Caplan v. Reynolds, 191 Iowa 453 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

X. Negligence: acts constituting : backing motor vehicle. -The plaintiff is a baker, and, at the time in question, was engaged in delivering bread to his customers in' the city of Des Moines. For this service he made use of an auto car. The defendant was a resident of the city, living on the north side of Dean Avenue, a street running east and west. Immediately adjacent on the west of defendant’s home was the home of Mrs. Grimm, one of the customers of the plaintiff. Between these lots was a private driveway, 10 feet wide, used in common for the convenience of the premises on either side, and extending from the avenue north to an east and west alley. Posted conspicuously at the opening of the driveway on the avenue was a notice: “Private Driveway. Please Keep Out.” On the west side of the driveway, near its north end, was a garage, in which the defendant kept an automobile.

On January 27, 1919, the plaintiff, following his daily custom, drove his delivery car to Dean Avenue to deliver bread to Mrs. Grimm. For that purpose he turned into the driveway to a point near the back door of the Grimm home. Having made the delivery, he returned to the driveway, and, standing in front of his car, with his back to the north, undertook to ‘ ‘ crank it.” About the same time, the defendant, desiring to drive a party of visitors to the railway station, backed his auto from his garage into the driveway, and, with the auto heading north, backed it south toward the avenue. This movement brought him into collision with plaintiff, who was in the act of cranking his delivery car. Plaintiff claims to have been severely injured, and charges the same to the negligence of the defendant. The [455]*455alleged negligence is stated in fonr specifications:' (1) In failing to notify plaintiff of his approach; (2) in backing his auto down the driveway, instead of driving forward; (3) in failing to observe plaintiff in the driveway and to stop his auto at once; and (4) in failing to give plaintiff proper and sufficient warning. The defendant denies all allegations of negligence on his part, and says that, if there was any negligence, it was in the failure of plaintiff himself to exercise reasonable care.

As we have already noted, these issues of fact were tried to a jury, and verdict returned for the defendant. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied, and from the judgment against him for costs, he appeals. In support of the appeal, four errors are assigned, and these we will consider in the order of their assignment.

I. That the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial upon the ground that the verdict was the result of passion and prejudice and is not sustained by the evidence.

We are unable to discover anything in the record indicating that the jury was swayed by prejudice or passion, and we are quite certain that the verdict cannot be said to have no support in the evidence. . The burden was upon the plaintiff, to establish by a preponderance of the testimony both the defendant’s negligence and his own freedom from contributory negligence. The accident was somewhat out of the usual order, in that, so far as relates to the actual collision and the circumstances immediately attending and preceding it, the parties themselves are the only witnesses; and their stories on the witness stand do not differ in any very material degree. Neither saw the other or knew of the other’s presence in the driveway until the actual collision took place. It appears that plaintiff’s engine did not crank readily, and he had made several ineffectual attempts to start it, and was still engaged in the effort when he was struck. Defendant testifies that, as he went from his house to the garage where his ear was kept, he glanced to the south along the driveway, and again looked that way as he backed the car out of the door, and on neither occasion did he discover the plaintiff. Following his usual habit, he did not turn the car about and come down the drive in a forward movement, but continued the reverse or backward movement in the direction of the avenue. [456]*456"We think "it cannot be said that he was negligent, as a matter of law, simply because he did not discover the plaintiff’s presence, or because he attempted to back out of the drive instead of turning around, or did not drive north to the transverse alley and around the block to get to his front door. He was in a private driveway; and, while we would not be disposed to hold the plaintiff a trespasser in this case, the fact that the way was a private one, not frequented by the general public, was a circumstance to be considered in the defendant’s favor, as bearing upon the degree of watchfulness and care he was bound to use. . Indeed, it would not be an unreasonable finding for the jury to say that the conduct of the defendant in the premises is not marked by any culpable want of care on his part, and that the collision may well be accounted for as a pure accident, for which no one can be held legally accountable. The most that can be said for it is that the charge of negligence is primarily a question for the jury, and, the jury having spoken, it is not for the court to interfere.

2 appeal and SyKfa¡imgatoer object. II. One of the grounds alleged for a new trial is that, during the argument to the jury, and while the presiding judge was absent from the court room, defendant’s counsel produced and read the jury a paper which he stated was the original notice which had been served 011 kfrg defendant in this case, such paper containing a notice to the effect that plaintiff’s counsel asserted an attorney’s lien to the amount of more than $6,000, upon the amount of damages sued for. This paper, it is said, had not been offered in evidence, and was not even filed" as part of the record in the case. Assuming the fact to be as stated, the conduct complained of was highly improper; and, had it been in any manner objected to and an exception preserved,' the penalty of submitting to a new trial might well be imposed.. It does not appear, however, that any objection was raised, or the attention of the court directed thereto. It is said that the court was temporarily out of the room when the incident occurred; but we think that, if the party aggrieved wishes to preserve a record for use on appeal, he should promptly call a halt in the proceedings until the judge is present and a proper record is obtained. So far as appears from the record, the matter was not called to the [457]*457attention of the court until after the verdict had been returned and judgment entered thereon. This was too late.

3. tkiai, : ins true-ing ^TOunds^ofs' negligence. III. In stating the issues to the jury, the court failed to mention the plaintiff’s second specification of defendant’s alleged negligence, to the effect that defendant was negligent in backing his car down the driveway, instead of tarning about and coming down with a forward movement. This is assigned as error.

What we have already said in the first paragraph of this opinion sufficiently covers the point here made. While the plaintiff, in his petition, has, in form, stated four different allegations of negligence, they are, at best, but variations upon a single thought, the alleged lack of care on the part of defendant in approaching the place where the collision occurred; and, although the court did not state this allegation in the very language of the pleading, we think the law was stated with sufficient fullness and exactness to purge the charge of any prejudicial error. The court, among other things, charged the jury as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
191 Iowa 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caplan-v-reynolds-iowa-1921.