Etzkorn v. City of Oelwein

120 N.W. 636, 142 Iowa 107
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 N.W. 636 (Etzkorn v. City of Oelwein) 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
Etzkorn v. City of Oelwein, 120 N.W. 636, 142 Iowa 107 (iowa 1909).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

In the city of Oelwein there is a public street known as Jefferson running east and west, upon the north side of which there was a board sidewalk extending from what was known as the St. Mary’s Episcopal Church lot westward about- one hundred feet to where it crossed the railway right of way in said town. It is claimed in the petition that defendant for a long time prior to April 15, 1907, suffered and permitted this sidewalk, especially at a point about five or six feet west of the southeast corner of lot 1, block 1, in said city, being at a place about thirteen feet from the southeast corner of St. Mary’s Church, to be and become out of repair, unsafe and dangerous, in that two of the planks which were of insufficient width and not laid close enough together, and to which others were not laid sufficiently close, became and were unfastened and loose from the sills or stringers to which nailed, the nails fastening the same to said sills or stringers, having become rusted, broken and loose, leaving said two planks lying loose and unfastened upon the sills or stringers and far apart from the next nearest planks, and liable to be displaced and tilted and trip pedestrians when passing over said sidewalk, and leaving a dangerous trap and hole or opening about nine inches in depth into which such pedestrians were also liable to step or fall, or [109]*109cause to be tripped, step or fall" by said planks being so displaced and loose. Plaintiff also claimed that while passing over this walk in company with .her sister on the 15th day of April she was tripped by said loose boards, thrown forward and down upon the walk, causing her right limb to be severely wrenched, bruised and impaired, and displacing an unborn child which she was then carrying from its natural position, causing delayed, prolonged, and more difficult labor and greatly injuring and impairing her health; and she asked damages in the sum of $5,000. In a second count to her petition she pleaded an assignment of her husband’s claim for damages growing out of the same transaction, and asked additional damages in the sum of $5,000. Defendant’s answer was in effect a general denial. The verdict was for $6,000, and the appeal presents many questions for review.

■Something like forty-four errors are assigned, and it is manifest that we can not consider all of them and confine this opinion within proper limits. The walk in question was properly constructed in the year 1898, the material used being 2x6 plank and 4x4 stringers; but it is contended that it became and was out of repair for some time before plaintiff received her injuries. She said that while passing along the walk in company with her sister, going in an easterly direction, and at a point about six feet from the end of the walk as it passed by the church lot, she tripped and fell by reason of two loose planks in the walk, which neither she nor her sister observed, resulting in the injuries complained of. Defendant contends that there is not. sufficient testimony upon which to base a verdict in any sum against it, in that there is no showing of any defect in the walk where plaintiff claims she fell, and no such notice to the defendant city of any such defect, if there was one, as to make it liable for damages. The testimony on this point was conflicting, and there was enough in plaintiff’s favor to justify a finding that there [110]*110was such a defect, and that defendant was guilty of negligence in not discovering and remedying it before the accident occurred. Counsel complain of many of the rulings on the admission.and rejection of testimony, of the instructions given, and of the refusal to give those asked by defendant, and of the ruling on the motion for a new trial based upon the excessiveness of the verdict, and the refusal to give a new trial because of newly discovered testimony.

i. Personal injury: evidence: pain and suffering. It appears that plaintiff had been delivered of four other children prior to the time the one in question was born. She was asked as to how these other children were born, whether in a normal or abnormal position; and as to whether or not she suffered any pains or inconvenience from the birth of her other children. Objections to these questions were interposed by defendant’s counsel, but they were overruled, and to the first question witness responded that they were horn in a normal position, and to the second that she had not suffered pains. We are constrained to hold that these questions were improper, and the answers thereto decidedly prejudicial. We know of no authority which holds that because a woman is delivered of one or more children in a normal position that others are likely to and will be bom in the same position. It is shown in the record before us, and it is well known, that unborn children assume various positions while in the mother’s womb, changing their position from time to time, and that whenever there is no movement there is danger not only to the child but to the mother. Plaintiff claimed that by reason of the fall her unborn child was forced into a transverse and unnatural position, where it remained until birth, when it had to he changed by means of instruments and manipulations into a proper position for delivery. In order to demonstrate this, she was permitted to testify that her other children were born in a normal position. There is no logical connection between -these [111]*111facts. Moreover, her testimony that she suffered no pain when her prior children were born may be true, although contrary to all human experience; but, even if true, it has no tendency to show that the pain she suffered from the delivery of her last child was due to the injury she received when she fell upon the sidewalk. Trapnell v. Red Oak, 76 Iowa, 744.

The last child was bom June 4, 1907; it weighed, when delivered, eight pounds, and it was sound and healthy. The only legitimate inference to be derived from her testimony as to prior childbirths was that these deliveries did not rupture any of her organs, and that she had not suffered any lesions which were found after the birth of her last child. Direct testimony was admissible upon this point, and it is manifest that counsel in offering this testimony was not trying to prove her physical condition prior to the birth of her last child. His effort undoubtedly was to have the jury believe that, as she had not previously suffered from' childbirth, her suffering which she described as accompanying the birth of her last child must have been due to the- accident upon the walk. For reasons already suggested, .we do not think this true, either as a logical or gynecological proposition. These rulings were repeated several times, and the same matters were shown by the husband’s testimony over objection.

2. examination of injury. It seems that upon defendant’s request the court appointed three physicians to examine plaintiff before the trial of the case. They made their examination, but were not offered as witnesses by either side. On plaintiff’s cross-examination she was asked . as to two or three statements which it is claimed she made to these doctors; one as to how she fell, and another as to the treatment given by -the doctor who visited her on the day of her fall. On redirect examination the following questions were asked and answered, and a record made as shown:

[112]*112(1) Q. Were these three doctors examining you during all that time that they were at the house? A. At the house very near all the time. I don’t quite remember how long the examination lasted.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.W. 636, 142 Iowa 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etzkorn-v-city-of-oelwein-iowa-1909.