Cuvelier Ex Rel. Cuvelier v. Town of Dumont

266 N.W. 517, 221 Iowa 1016
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1936
DocketNo. 43286.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 517 (Cuvelier Ex Rel. Cuvelier v. Town of Dumont) 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
Cuvelier Ex Rel. Cuvelier v. Town of Dumont, 266 N.W. 517, 221 Iowa 1016 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Richards, J.

During th'e day and evening of August 11, 1933, a public celebration was being carried on in defendant town. The principal activities were in the business section, upon those parts of Main and Second streets where are located stores and other places of commercial pursuit. These two streets intersected, Main street extending north and south and Second street east and west. In the evening celebration the activities centered on Main street and that portion of Second street east of Main, and the crowd of celebrants were there gathered. At about 9 o’clock on that evening a storm rather suddenly made its appearance with accompanying wind, lightning, thunder, and rain. Thereupon, plaintiff, and another young man, plaintiff’s cousin, to seek shelter, left Main street and hurriedly proceeded toward the west; their course being on the sidewalk along the south side of Second street between Main street and the north and south alley west of Main. The destination of plaintiff was a garage located on the south side of Second street and immediately west of the alley. There were twenty or thirty people ahead of plaintiff, proceeding in the same direction, hurrying to shelter, fully occupying the sidewalk, and when plaintiff overtook them, at a point about 40 feet east of the alley, he and his cousin stepped to the north, off the sidewalk, and started to run around this *1018 crowd; their course being parallel with and about 5 feet north of the sidewalk. While so running around the crowd and at the east line of the alley, plaintiff came into contact with a No. 9 smooth wire that extended across the street, and thereby plaintiff received the injuries of which he complains. This wire had been fastened to poles at each side of the street in such manner that it extended across practically the entire street except the sidewalks, and at a height of about 5 feet above the street level. This wire had been stretched in this manner across the street by defendant’s city marshal and street commissioner during the preceding morning, and at the time of plaintiff’s injury had not been removed. When the wire had been put up the city officer had placed a small piece of red cloth at each end. The street was 70 feet in width between the sidewalks and its surface was graveled. At the alley where the wire was stretched there were no lights, flares, nor warnings of its presence, and there were no street lights on this part of Second street; the nearest street light being on Main, a half block to the east. Aside from the street light on Main, the only artificial light that illuminated the place where the wire was stretched came from the interior lights of a hotel that occupied the north side of Second street, between Main and the alley, and of a store located opposite the hotel on south side of the street, and of the garage on the south side of Main immediately west of the alley.

Upon defendant’s assignments of error the contention is made that plaintiff was guilty of negligence per se contributing to his injuries. Upon that question the jury could have found from the evidence the following facts, additional to those above outlined: That as plaintiff was running around the crowd that was on the sidewalk he was looking ahead; that he saw the electric pole to which the wire had been fastened, and saw ears parked west of the wire; and that he saw that there was a space of 4 or 5 feet between the southmost car and the above-mentioned electric pole at the south side of the street; that plaintiff was intending to run through this 4 or 5 foot space and thence into the garage on the west side of the alley; that he had no notice nor knowledge of the presence of the wire; that there was not sufficient light to make the wire at all visible to plaintiff, excepting perhaps when there were occasional flashes of lightning.

That it was not negligence per se to proceed in the *1019 nighttime upon parts of the unlighted street other than the sidewalk, so long as plaintiff exercised that care and caution which reasonably prudent persons would exercise in so doing, is held in Middleton v. Cedar Falls, 173 Iowa 619, 637, 153 N. W. 1040, 1048. Appellant contends that the fact that plaintiff ivas running, instead of walking, added to the fact that plaintiff was proceeding elsewhere than on the sidewalk, in the nighttime, establishes negligence per se. In the Middleton case, supra, under quite similar facts the court said:

“It is not negligence per se for one to pass along a street in the nighttime without a light, nor is it negligence per se to then walk rapidly; and this is certainly true where an injured party had no reasonable grounds for believing that the city had been derelict in its duty in keeping the street in a reasonably safe condition, and where, under the law, she had a right to anticipate that it was in safe condition.”

In Erickson v. Town of Manson, 180 Iowa 378, 160 N. W. 276, the plaintiff was injured in the daytime on account of coming into contact with a wire stretched along the side of the street. She had come hurriedly out of her house, buttoning her coat, and passed quickly on a direct line toward an auto, and while so doing the wire, stretched horizontally, caught her across the face, causing her injuries. She testified that she could not say whether she looked to see whether there was any obstruction; that she was not expecting any obstructions and was not certain whether she looked to see whether there were any overhead obstructions; that she was watching the children as she left the house for the automobile; that her attention was attracted by the passing of another car. The opinion holds the question of her contributory negligence was for the jury, although, it is true, there is no specific discussion in the opinion of the hurried manner of approaching the wire that caused the injury. In considering the speed with which plaintiff was proceeding, in the case at bar, there is the evidence of the storm, as a diverting circumstance, and the diverting nature of this circumstance is easily seen, because it aroused in plaintiff and the others of the crowd the very natural impulse to escape. Further, visualizing plaintiff’s surroundings, it is to be noted that he was not proceeding in utter darkness. The illumination of plaintiff’s course along the street was at least so sufficient that the people on the *1020 sidewalk, the parked cars, and the electric pole were all visible to plaintiff, and from the evidence we think the jury could well have found that there was sufficient light to reveal to plaintiff, and to enable him to avoid, as he ran along the street, any object a person of ordinary caution would anticipate being rightfully in the street. No person in the exercise of ordinary care would be required to anticipate the probability that the city had erected across the street an invisible menace and entrapment, such as was this wire. In view of the record as pointed out, and the authorities cited, we cannot agree with appellant that all reasonable minds would be in accord that plaintiff acted in a negligent manner. We think it was a question for the jury.

Appellant contends that plaintiff’s cause of action, because brought more than three months after the happening of plaintiff’s injury, was barred by the statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 517, 221 Iowa 1016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuvelier-ex-rel-cuvelier-v-town-of-dumont-iowa-1936.