Eclipse Lumber Co. v. Davis

207 N.W. 238, 201 Iowa 1283
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 238 (Eclipse Lumber Co. v. Davis) 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
Eclipse Lumber Co. v. Davis, 207 N.W. 238, 201 Iowa 1283 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Faville, J.

This action was originally brought to recover damages for negligence claimed to have been’ caused by the employees of a railroad company in blocking a street in the city of Fairfield and thus preventing a fire truck • from arriving expeditiously at the scene of a fire in the property of appellee lumber company. The cause was originally tried to a jury,- and verdict returned for the plaintiffs, except the Eclipse Lumber Company. Judgment was rendered on the verdict, and the defendant appealed. In this court the cause was reversed (Eclipse Lbr. Co. v. Davis, 196 Iowa 1849). After procedendo had been issued from this court, appellant filed in the district court a motion for dismissal of said cause, and subsequently amended said motion. Appellees filed a resist- *1285 anee to said motion for dismissal. Tbe motion to dismiss was based on several grounds, which may be summarized, however, in the contention that, under the opinion of this court in the former appeal, appellees were not entitled to a retrial of said cause, and that judgment should be entered dismissing said cause. A hearing was had upon the said motion to dismiss, and at said time appellant, in support of his motion, offered in evidence the transcript of the testimony and the record of the proceedings had upon the trial of the original cause in 1922, including the original pleadings, instructions, verdict of the jury, judgment, the opinion of this court, and the procedendo. Appellees offered in evidence the abstract of record and appellant’s argument in this court upon the original appeal.

• It is unnecessary for us to attempt to review or summarize the extensive record so made. The facts of the case are sufficiently set out in the opinion on the former appeal.

I. The verdict of the jury as shown by the record was as follows:

“We, the jury, find for the plaintiffs, except Eclipse Lumber Company, and against the defendant, J. C. Davis, as agent of the president, and assess the amount of their recovery at $34,500.”

One ground of appellant’s motion was that he was entitled to judgment on the verdict against the Eclipse Lumber Company. This portion of the motion should have been sustained, K does not appear that any formal judgment was enfere(l upon the verdict against the Eclipse Lumber Company, and, the jury having found in favor of the other plaintiffs in the action, “except the Eclipse Lumber Company,” appellant was technically entitled to a judgment upon the verdict in his' behalf, dismissing the petition as to the Eclipse Lumber Company. The court should have sustained the motion to this extent.

II. The plaintiffs, aside from the Eclipse Lumber Company, are insurance companies that carried insurance upon the *1286 stock of lumber of tbe Eclipse Lumber Company wbicli was destroyed by the fire in question, and, they having paid the several amounts of insurance for which they were liable under their policies, the claim of the Eclipse Lumber Company against appellant was assigned to the several companies, and they were subrogated to the rights of the Eclipse Lumber Company, and bring this action by virtue of such subrogation.

It is appellant’s contention that the motion for a dismissal of said action should have been sustained because, the verdict of the jury having been adverse to the Eclipse Lumber Company, under the facts of the case, appellees cannot recover; the precise point being that the finding of the jury against the claim of the Eclipse Lumber Company was. of necessity .a finding, as a matter of law, that the Eclipse Lumber Company had been guilty of contributory negligence, and, therefore, that its assignees, the other plaintiffs, could not recover in this action.

Of course, it was essential, to entitle plaintiffs to recover in this action, that they prove that the Eclipse Lumber Company was free from contributory negligence on its part; but the finding of the jury in the form of the verdict above set forth is not necessarily a finding that the jury found the Eclipse Lumber Company to be guilty of contributory negligence. There were no special findings of the jury, and only the general verdict referred to.

The Eclipse Lumber Company, by its pleadings and under its evidence, contended, and offered evidence tending to show, that the amount of total loss was in excess of the total amounts of insurance paid to it by the insurance companies, who were coplaintiffs with the Eclipse Lumber Company, and sought recovery for such excess. The court instructed the jury to the effect that, if the Eclipse Lumber Company “suffered no loss in° excess of $35,000” paid to it by the other plaintiffs, or if it found “that the amount to be so allowed to plaintiffs does not exceed the sum of $35,000,” then the Eclipse Lumber Company would not be entitled to participate in any recovery.

The court also instructed the jury that, if the lumber company was guilty of contributory negligence, none of the *1287 plaintiffs could recover in the action. It is tbe contention óf appellant that there was' evidence, as shown by the record, upon which the jury could find that the loss was in excess of $35,000, and that, therefore, the finding of the jury in favor of the plaintiffs, except the Eclipse Lumber Company, was necessarily a finding that the Eclipse Lumber Company had been guilty of contributory negligence. If this were true, it necessarily follows that the other plaintiffs, standing in the shoes of the Eclipse Lumber Company, could not recover. The difficulty with appellant’s contention at this point is that the evidence in the case was sufficient to carry to the jury the question as to whether or not the total loss to the Eclipse Lumber Company exceeded the total amount of the insurance. This question was submitted to the jury, and there was evidence to warrant such submission. It was not for the trial court, nor is it for this court, to determine where lies the greater weight of the evidence on this question. But .we cannot hold, upon the record, that the evidence is so conclusive that the loss did not exceed the amount of insurance that we must hold, as a necessary deduction therefrom, that the jury by its verdict must have found that the Eclipse Lumber Company was not entitled to recover because it was guilty of contributory negligence.

The deduction of appellant is not a necessary one under the record. The jury might have found from the record that the loss of the Eclipse Lumber Company was no greater than the amount of insurance received by it, and therefore denied it recovery for that reason. The jury might have found, under the evidence, that the Eclipse Lumber Company was guilty of contributory negligence, and therefore have denied it recovery on this ground. There are no special findings to indicate upon which ground the jury placed its verdict, and we cannot assume from the record upon which ground the verdict was predicated. Both questions were submitted to the jury for its determination.

It therefore follows that the court did not err in overruling appellant’s motion to dismiss the cause upon the ground that, under the record, the verdict denying relief to the Eclipse Lumber Company was conclusive on the question of contributory negligence, and hence conclusive of a right of recovery on the part of the other plaintiffs in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 238, 201 Iowa 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eclipse-lumber-co-v-davis-iowa-1926.