Davidson Bros. v. Des Moines City Railway Co.

170 Iowa 467
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 18, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 170 Iowa 467 (Davidson Bros. v. Des Moines City 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
Davidson Bros. v. Des Moines City Railway Co., 170 Iowa 467 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The defendant operates a street railway system in the city of Des Moines. The plaintiff carries on a wholesale fruit and produce business in the same city and makes use of an auto truck for the delivery of goods sold to local retail merchants. On January 12,1912, the plaintiff, having occasion to deliver certain goods at the store of Moon Brothers, which fronts south upon Easton Boulevard, one door west of its intersection with East Twenty-fourth Street, sent an employee, one Hablitz, to perform that service. Along the middle of the boulevard in front of Moons’ store is the track of the defendant’s Walker Street line. This line ends at Twenty-fourth Street, where cars coming from the west on the boulevard make the turn for their return trip by the use of a “Y,” which extends north the necessary distance on [469]*469Twenty-fourth Street. On the corner lot between Moons’ and Twenty-fourth Street is a drug store which, to a greater or less extent, serves to hide-the view of a car on the “Y” from a person in the street in front of Moons’. There was snow on the street, but its depth and the extent and size of the drifts and the obstruction therefrom, if any, to the convenient use of the street are matters upon which there is considerable conflict in the evidence. On the occasion now under inquiry, plaintiff’s employee drove the truck to the front of Moons’ store for the purpose of delivering the goods. While he was so engaged, one of the defendant’s cars which had been out on the “Y” track came back around the corner into the boulevard and into collision with the standing truck, causing the injuries complained of. Alleging that such collision and injury were occasioned by the negligence of defendant’s servants in the management of the car, and without contributory negligence by plaintiff or its employee, this action is brought to recover damages. The negligence charged is alleged to have been manifested (1) in failure to exercise due care to stop the car and thus prevent the collision; and (2) in the further fact that the truck was standing at rest and merchandise was being unloaded therefrom in plain view of the persons managing the car, who failed to heed the signal or alarm given by the driver or to stop and give him opportunity to move the truck to a position of safety. The allegations of the petition, are denied by the answer.

1. Negligence: when not disturbed on appeal. I. Appellant submits the proposition that there is no substantial showing of- negligence on its part, and that a verdict should, therefore, have been directed in its favor, Bearing in mind the elementary rule that, the Dury having found the defendant negligoat as charged, the court on appeal will not disturb the finding if the evidence, when given its most favorable construction in plaintiff’s behalf, affords any reasonable or substantial support therefor, we have no trouble in saying that the objection is not well taken. The evidence on the part [470]*470of plaintiff fairly tends to show that, from the moment the ear came from behind the screen afforded by the drug store, the truck was in plain view of the motorman; but he continued around the curve a distance of thirty to thirty-five feet into the boulevard and into the collision without stopping, although the driver of the truck, standing upon the track at or near the rear of the truck, threw up his-hands and signaled him to stop. According to the motorman’s own statement, he was moving very slowly — about one mile per hour — and he could readily have avoided the accident. He says, “When we were coming around the curve I think we were going not over a mile an hour and I was just taking my time in coming around the curve. I was moving slowly. When I got toward the curve I noticed the auto there close to the track.” He further states that, as he came up to the truck, he noticed it was close, but the front end of the car cleared it and he continued his course until the rear steps, which projected outward beyond the body of the 'ear, hit the truck. Plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that the car was moving more rapidly, perhaps five miles an hour, and raked its whole length against the truck. It is a fair inference from his own statement that the motorman knew the nearness of the truck to the railway track; but finding in his slow approach that the front end of his car was clearing the obstruction, he forgot for the moment the danger to be apprehended from the projecting steps at the rear, and thus brought about the injury. If so, the question of his negligence was clearly one for the jury. And even if he was not forgetful and continued to move his car in the honest belief or opinion that there was room for him to pass without colliding with the truck, the position of which was directly under his eye, it would still be a question of fact and not of law whether he was exercising that reasonable measure of care that his duty required. Still again, the jury could have found under the evidence that Hablitz, standing upon the track, signaled the car in time to stop before reaching the truck, and if this be true, it could [471]*471well be said that the motorman saw it, or, in the exercise of due care, ought to have seen it, and his failure to heed it was negligence.

2. Negligence: vehicle in known place of danger: contributory negligence. II. Is the plaintiff’s driver chargeable with contributory-negligence as a matter of law ? This is affirmed by the appellant on the ground that the driver stopped the truck at a plaee where he knew it would not clear a passing car. In our judgment, this fact, if conceded, does not conclusively negative the exercise.of reasonable care on his part. He was not a trespasser. He could rightfully stand his truck in position to enable him to unload his goods. According to his testimony, the street was blocked with snow, which was to some extent heaped and drifted, leaving just room enough for a wagon. The width of the passable part of the street between the track and Moons’ store, he estimates at six feet, and his truck was ten and a half feet in length. He stopped with the front end of the truck nearest the store, the body of the vehicle angling to the west and the rear end nearer to the car track. The ear in question was out of sight on the “Y” and he did not know of its presence until it came past the end of the drug store to take the curve in his direction. There was evidently not time for him then to mount the truck, start his engine and move out of the way, and he sought to stop the car by standing on the track and signaling the motorman. While he says, in one part of his testimony, with reference to the plaee where he stood his truck, “If I knew of the car I would have drove up so he would have cleared,” and also stated that he knew it was not in the clear, he further testified:

“If I had known I was going to hit there, I could not have driven up a little farther; the snow was too deep. I won’t say it was three feet, but deep enough-so I could not get in there. I understand these motors and what they can do, so I did not try it. I was not seared of the car hitting [472]*472me and wrecking me, it would take only five minutes to unload the stuff. I made no attempt to go farther in, for I knew I could not get in any further. ’ ’

There was evidence on the part of the appellant denying the existence of any serious obstruction of the street by snow and indicating that the truck could have been driven nearer the curb, but the conflict is not for this court to decide. In no aspect of the evidence can we say it shows conclusively a want of care by the driver.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Iowa 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-bros-v-des-moines-city-railway-co-iowa-1915.