Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Sheldon

63 N.W.2d 892, 245 Iowa 674, 48 A.L.R. 2d 522, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1954
Docket48432
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 63 N.W.2d 892 (Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Sheldon) 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
Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Sheldon, 63 N.W.2d 892, 245 Iowa 674, 48 A.L.R. 2d 522, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390 (iowa 1954).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

— The collision occurred shortly after 10 a. m., February 29, 1952, several miles north of Audubon, on U. S. *677 Highway 71, upon the slopes of two hills, over which the highway runs north and south without turns. The paved slab of the highway is there eighteen feet wide. From the south the highway slopes down from the break or crest of a hill to the foot of that hill, then immediately up a hill to the north. From crest to crest the distance traveled is thirty-one hundred feet. Witnesses testified the weather was raw and damp, with snow flurries and some melting. The pavement was covered with wet, slushy snow and was icy and slick. Three motor vehicles were involved, none of which was equipped with tire chains.

Plaintiff, Herbert Christensen, then age thirteen years, pleaded he was riding as a guest in a Willys pickup (jeep) operated by defendant McCuen and owned by defendant Williamson. This jeep was traveling north on the highway. A tractor-trailer unit operated by defendant Sheldon and owned by defendant Wittroek was proceeding in front of the jeep. The jeep started to pass the tractor-trailer unit. In the course of this maneuver the two vehicles bumped or sideswiped and the jeep went out of control, skidded along the pavement for some distance, and. collided with a Packard automobile, owned and operated by' defendant Ironside, which was traveling south on the highway. The jeep was almost demolished and plaintiff was seriously injured. He brought this action for damages against the operators and owners of the three motor vehicles, alleging his injuries were caused by the negligent operation of the trailer-truck unit by Sheldon, and of the Packard by Ironside, and the reckless operation of the jeep by McCuen.

The case was tried to a jury. After the evidence for plaintiff had been completed, the defendant operator and owner of each motor vehicle moved for a. directed verdict. The court sustained the motion of defendant Ironside, who owned and operated the Packard, and the motion of defendants McCuen and Williamson, the operator and owner of the jeep pickup. The motion for directed verdict of defendants Sheldon and Wittroek, the operator and owner of the tractor-trailer unit, was overruled, but the court sustained their alternative motion to take from the consideration of the jury two of the specifications of negligence pleaded against Sheldon. Trial to the jury *678 resulted in a verdict for defendants Sheldon and Wittrock. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment for all the defendants.

I. Plaintiff predicates error upon the order withdrawing from the consideration of the jury two pleaded specifications of negligence against Sheldon based upon excessive speed of the tractor-trailer unit. This unit with its load weighed about twenty-five tons. It was almost forty-five feet long. The tractor had six wheels, two on the front for steering and four duals called the drivers. There was another wheel at the connection between the tractor and trailer and four on the trailer. There were air brakes on the tractor and brakes on the trailer. All the brakes could be operated by the foot pedal and the trailer brakes alone could be operated by a hand lever.

Plaintiff testified the northbound jeep in which he was riding had overtaken the tractor-trailer unit, and traveled behind it to the break on the crest of the south hill. There McCuen sounded the horn of the jeep, pulled into the left lane and started to pass the tractor-trailer unit. Both vehicles were then traveling at about thirty miles per hour. As they proceeded north down the hill the speed of both increased. For some distance the two vehicles traveled side by side. The speed of the jeep was fifty or fifty-five miles per hour. The speed of the tractor-trailer unit was about fifty miles per hour. When they had gone about halfway down the hill the pickup jeep started to turn back into the right-hand lane. The cab of the jeep was then ahead of the tractor. At about that time the southbound Packard of defendant Ironside came over the crest of the hill to the north. When the jeep turned into the right lane its right side came into glancing contact Avith the left front part of the tractor. Plaintiff testified he felt a bump on the back of the jeep. The jeep went out of control and slid along the highway a considerable distance, down the slope of the south hill and up the slope of the north hill. It first skidded northwest to the left side of the pavement, then northeast to and upon the right shoulder, and then northwest across the pavement to the left, where it was struck on its right side by the Packard. Plaintiff testified that' when the jeep slid back to the right he observed the speed of the' oncoming Packard traveling down the north hill was about seventy miles per hour. Plaintiff was sitting between *679 his father (who was killed in the collision) and defendant Mc-Cuen. Plaintiff had dropped down under the dashboard before the collision with the Packard and did not see the collision.

Defendant Sheldon admitted the speed of the tractor-trailer unit was greater on the down slope (where the jeep was attempting to pass) than it had been. He testified he did not hear the passing signal; he was traveling at about forty miles per hour and was not quite halfway down the south hill when he first saw the jeep beside him; the cab of the jeep was then even with the cab of the tractor; he applied the trailer brakes but not the tractor brakes, his vehicle slowed down a little, the jeep crowded him over to the shoulder, bumped the left front fender of his tractor and jarred the tractor over; his speed was then about forty miles per hour; after the bump he continued down the hill with his right wheels on the shoulder; his trailer brakes were “on”, his tractor brakes were not applied because he thought that would cause his unit to “jackknife”, the jeep was weaving back and forth ahead of his vehicle; he saw the Packard strike the jeep; his vehicle was then thirty feet to the south; his vehicle struck and clipped off about six guardrails on the right, jackknifed and stopped on the south slope of the north hill, north of the wreckage of the jeep which was a few feet north of the Packard.

Tracks along the highway indicated the wheels of the tractor-trailer unit skidded to a stop. Sheldon estimated the point where the jeep and the Packard collided was about five hundred feet north of the place where the jeep bumped the fender of his tractor. Counsel for plaintiff contend the record shows this distance was about nine hundred feet.

Plaintiff pleaded the highway was snow-packed and slippery. He pleaded Sheldon was negligent:

(1) and (2). In increasing the speed of the tractor-trailer unit while it was being passed by the pickup. (Section 321.299 Code of Iowa, 1950.)

“(3). In driving his said tractor-trailer unit upon said highway at a speed and in such a manner as to endanger or be likely to endanger person or property.

“(4). In driving his said tractor-trailer unit upon said highway at a speed in excess of 50 m. p. h.

*680 “(5). In failing to have his tractor-trailer unit under control at the time and place and under the circumstances existing at the time of the collision.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.W.2d 892, 245 Iowa 674, 48 A.L.R. 2d 522, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christensen-ex-rel-christensen-v-sheldon-iowa-1954.