City of Cedar Rapids v. Moses

223 N.W.2d 263, 1974 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1156
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1974
Docket56496
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 223 N.W.2d 263 (City of Cedar Rapids v. Moses) 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
City of Cedar Rapids v. Moses, 223 N.W.2d 263, 1974 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1156 (iowa 1974).

Opinions

MASON, Justice.

The issue presented by plaintiff’s appeal is whether it is negligence as a matter of law for an emergency vehicle traveling in a proper lane of a multilane street of a city or town providing for two-way movement of traffic to cross the center line to the left and proceed to travel the wrong way in a lane providing for movement of traffic in the opposite direction. The appeal arises from a law action brought by the City of Cedar Rapids to recover property damages to one of its two-wheeled police patrol motorcycles as a result of a collision between the motorcycle and a Pontiac automobile owned and being driven by defendant, John Nelson Moses.

First Avenue in Cedar Rapids at the points and time material here was a multi-lane street running in a general easterly and westerly direction. There were two lanes separated by broken white lines for eastbound traffic and two lanes for westbound traffic separated in a similar manner, plus a center turn lane referred to in the record as “the storage lane.” The lanes provided for eastbound traffic were separated from those provided for westbound traffic by two solid yellow lines.

About 11:15 a. m. April 23, 1969, while checking limit parking zones in the city James Gillen, an officer assigned to motorcycle patrol for the traffic division of the Cedar Rapids Police Department, received a radio call directing him to assist at an accident at a shopping center. As Gillen entered First Avenue at 35th in response to the order he was informed by another call that an ambulance was in route and a woman was pinned under a trailer. Considering this then to be an emergency run Gillen turned on the red light and siren of the motorcycle at this point and proceeded east in the direction of the shopping center traveling in the center of the street in the “storage lanes” because of the double lanes of traffic in the eastbound lanes.

At 38th Street there were three lanes of moving traffic to Gillen’s right, two in the eastbound lanes and one in the left turn lane. After stopping momentarily Gillen traveled through the intersection continuing east. Shortly after crossing the intersection he encountered rubber cones in the street which had been placed there by the engineering department to mark lines which had just been painted. Ordinarily the police department does not receive any communication from the engineering department regarding the locations where they are painting lane marking lines. Gil-len turned left of these cones since they present a hazard to a motorcycle although not to an automobile. We are told in the record if a motorcycle were to collide with one of the cones it would undoubtedly put the cycle on the ground.

As Gillen traveled east from 38th Street he was from two to five feet left of these cones in a westbound lane, that is, proceeding up the wrong side of the street. He continued in this line of travel to 40th Street where the collision occurred.

Moses and his fiance had been traveling east on First Avenue since 17th Street intending to stop for lunch at McDonald’s located on the north side of First Avenue at 40th Street. When they reached 38th Street Moses stopped for a traffic light. As [266]*266he proceeded east on First Avenue from this intersection he saw the cones indicating wet paint, slowed down and put his left turn signal on. According to Moses they had stopped painting about a half a block from 40th Street which would enable him to pull into the “storage lane” for left turns at 40th Street since there were no cones at that point. Moses said he was traveling only two or three miles per hour when he turned into the “storage lane.” He then began his left turn into McDonald’s and was only a few feet from the driveway when the collision occurred. The impact occurred in the inside west lane as the motorcycle struck the Moses car in the area of the left front wheel.

Plaintiff had alleged defendant’s negligence in one or more of several particulars was a proximate cause of the collision and damages to its motorcycle. Defendant in answer admitted some allegations and denied others. He specifically denied each and every specification of negligence asserted by plaintiff and the allegation as to proximate cause of the collision.

Defendant also asserted as an affirmative defense plaintiff and its employees were negligent in one or more of five particulars which was a proximate cause of the collision. In one specification defendant asserted plaintiff was negligent in driving the motor vehicle to the left of the center line in violation of section 321.297, The Code.

All references to statutes in this opinion are from The Code, 1966.

Trial was to a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case defendant moved to strike certain allegations of plaintiff’s petition, some of which the plaintiff withdrew or requested permission to amend to conform to proof. The court reserved ruling on some portions of defendant’s motion to strike other allegations of plaintiff’s petition and overruled the balance of the motion. Defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was also overruled.

At the close of all evidence the court ruled on defendant’s earlier motion striking one of the specifications of negligence alleged by plaintiff and limiting the use of another. Various motions to strike, to conform to proof and defendant’s renewed motion for directed verdict were overruled and the matter was submitted to the jury which returned a defendant’s verdict.

In instruction 16 the jury was told the operator of a motor vehicle, in cities and towns, was required to travel on the right-hand side of the center of the street and that a failure to comply with this provision of the law constituted negligence. The jury was further told this requirement did not apply to the operator of a motor vehicle turning his vehicle left across the center of a street to enter a private drive.

The court’s instruction (17) on legal excuse will be considered later.

In another instruction the jury was told the driver of an authorized emergency vehicle responding to an emergency call shall not assume any special privilege under the law except the privilege granted in approaching a red or stop sign or signal to pass such sign or signal cautiously (section 321.231) and the privilege to exceed speed limitations (section 321.296).

In motion for new trial plaintiff maintained the court erred in failing to give its requested instruction on legal excuse and in its interpretation of various sections of chapter 321, The Code.

The court overruled the motion pointing out it had failed to find any special privilege for the driver of an emergency vehicle in passing or in driving in the wrong traffic lane.

I. It is conceded Gillen was traveling east in the inside lane for westbound traffic left of the center line dividing the lanes for eastbound and westbound traffic at the time of the accident. It is also conceded plaintiff’s motorcycle in this instance was an authorized emergency vehicle and that Gillen was making an emergency run in answering the call to the shopping center.

[267]*267The trial court held this to be a violation of section 321.297 and was negligence as a matter of law and instructed the jury accordingly.

This statute as then in force provided:

“Traveling on right-hand side. The operator of a motor vehicle, in cities and towns, shall at all times travel on the right-hand side of the center of the street.”

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City of Cedar Rapids v. Moses
223 N.W.2d 263 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 N.W.2d 263, 1974 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cedar-rapids-v-moses-iowa-1974.