Carr v. Inter-Urban Railway Co.

191 Iowa 501
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 191 Iowa 501 (Carr v. Inter-Urban Railway 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
Carr v. Inter-Urban Railway Co., 191 Iowa 501 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Per CuriaM.

i. NEGiiiaEHOE: jury question. It is alleged that, at about 6 A. M.f December 1, 1916, while it was still quite dark, deceased was walking from his home to his place of work, on the east side of East Thirty-third Street, and north of Cleveland Avenue, in Des Moines; that, in doing so, it was necessary for him to cross the tracks of defendant; and that, while passing over, upon, or across defendant’s tracks, at a point in East Thirty-third Street, near the intersection of said street and Cleveland Avenue, he was struck by one of defendant’s outbound cars, receiving injuries from which he died a few hours later; that there was no sidewalks in that vicinity; and that, at the time deceased was so struck, he was following the footpath along defendant’s tracks which had been made and habitually used by pedestrians in that vicinity, with the knowledge of defendant and its employees; that defendant has a double track on East Thirty-third Street, running substantially north and south, with an upgrade to the north; that deceased was struck by one of defendant’s north-bound interurban cars, while proceeding north along defendant’s east track; that, immediately before deceased was struck, a street car of the Des Moines City Railway proceeded down hill toward the south, on the west track, past deceased; that, the street car being lighted, the attention of the deceased was attracted thereto, as it approached and passed him in the darkness, and by reason thereof, and on account of the darkness'and the confusion, noise, and lights of the passing street car, and by reason of the negligence of the defendant, deceased failed to notice defendant’s inter[503]*503urban ear in time to avoid injury to himself; and that he was free from contributory negligence.

The negligence charged is: 1. That the motorman in charge of defendant’s car did not have proper control over the same. 2. The motorman failed to keep a proper lookout ahead, whereby he would have seen deceased in time to have stopped the car and avoided striking him. 3. The motorman failed to put into motion means of stopping his car, after seeing deceased in a place of peril upon the tracks, and to be on the lookout in time to have stopped the car before striking deceased. 4. The car was operated at a high and dangerous rate of speed. 5. The ear was not equipped with proper headlight to enable the motorman to see deceased in time to avoid striking him.

Defendant denied generally, and alleged contributory negligence. No evidence was introduced on behalf of the defendant. "We must give plaintiff’s evidence and the legitimate inferences to be drawn therefrom a construction most favorable to plaintiff.

Deceased lived on North Avenue, west of East Thirty-third Street. He was proceeding to his work, and was injured while proceeding along defendant’s tracks on East Thirty-third Street, and a block or so south of the place where he was to work. He had just passed Cleveland Avenue, and was walking between the rails of defendant’s east track. After the car stopped, a person living in the neighborhood came out and measured the distance from the north line of Cleveland Avenue to where deceased lay, between the east and west tracks. Witness says that deceased, at that time, lay east of the west line of East Thirty-third Street, and 20 feet north of the north line of Cleveland Avenue; that the head of deceased was near the east rail of the west track, with his head to the south, between the two tracks. Defendant’s tracks do not run exactly north and south, but slightly to the northeast at Cleveland Avenue, and for a ways north. There is a street light on the south line of the crossing, just east of the east track. The evidence shows that, from Cleveland Avenue south, the railroad is in East Thirty-third Street. It was in East Thirty-third Street at the point where deceased was struck. Plats and photographs were used in evidence, showing the point where plaintiff was injured, [504]*504where Thirty-third Street begins, and where the so-called private right of way of the company commences and ends. There is a beaten path between the rails. It appears from the evidence that, in going from the home of deceased to his place of work at Carpenter’s, one would naturally follow the interurban tracks. The interurban track turns from North Avenue to the north or northeast, some distance west of East Thirty-third, the rails of the track at the bend being about 600 feet west of East Thirty-third. It was the custom of the' public traveling in that vicinity to follow the track around the bend from North Avenue, north across other east and west streets, striking East Thirty-third on the tracks at Cleveland Avenue. Defendant’s right of way extended north from North Avenue to Cleveland. Thirty-third Street was not paved. The street light was lighted, and a witness says she saw deceased walking up the tracks a little north of the crossing, and saw him by the street light. Another witness says the street light has considerable reflection, and that, from his home, some 400 feet north, he can, by this light, see people walking across Cleveland Avenue, and that its light extends clear across the north side of the avenue. The motorman on the street car was coming back on the inbound car, on the west track, and passed the deceased coming up the tracks, and passed the interurban coming north on the east track, about 100 feet behind deceased. 0Witness says that he was about 50 or 75 feet north of Cleveland Avenue when he first saw deceased-; that, at that time, deceased was just about on Cleveland Avenue, and was coming north in the center, between the two tracks; .that deceased was walking between the two tracks, and, as the street car approached him, he moved over east, into the outbound track between the rails, out of the way of the street car. Witness says that a party by the name of Mansfield, with him in the car, remarked that the “interurban is going to get awfully close to that man,” as deceased stepped over onto the east track in front of the interurban. Witness says he had no trouble in seeing Carr’ at that time; that he passed nobody else walking up or down the track, that morning, as his car was coming southward, toward Cleveland; that he saw deceased by the use of the headlight on his own car, and not by the interurban headlight, which he says did not strike deceased when [505]*505lie first saw him; that deceased had a cap pulled down over his head, with a coat having a heavy collar turned up; that the street car was running about 5 miles an hour, when he crossed Cleveland, and he thought the interurban was coming at about 7 to 9 miles an hour when it crossed Cleveland; that the motorman on the interurban had turned his light down from high to low arc, after he got up close to the street car, and did not turn it on again until after he had passed the street car; that this was done under orders of the company, as the heavy lights blind the approaching street cars, or anybody who has to look toward them, and aie intended only to throw a long-light down the track; that witness did not sound his gong, as deceased stepped out of his way.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Iowa 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-inter-urban-railway-co-iowa-1921.