Ferguson v. City of Des Moines

198 N.W. 40, 197 Iowa 689, 1924 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 1, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 40 (Ferguson v. City of Des Moines) 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
Ferguson v. City of Des Moines, 198 N.W. 40, 197 Iowa 689, 1924 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 736 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Faville, J.

About nine o’clock in the evening of the 19th of October, 1922, appellee’s son was driving appellee’s automobile in a northerly direction on Bast Ninth Street in the city of Des Moines. There is a street-car track on said street. The street is thirty-five feet in width from curb to curb. The automobile was being driven on the right-hand, or east, side of the street. East Ninth Street is intersected at right angles by Sheridan Avenue, which runs east and west, and a street light is located at the intersection of these streets. The night in ques[690]*690tion was described as being a “bright” night. The evidence tends to show that appellee’s automobile was being driven at the time at a speed of fifteen or twenty miles an hour. The automobile was in good condition. The headlights were lighted, and the brakes in good working order.

On the east side of the center of East Ninth Street, and ten or fifteen feet south of the intersection of Sheridan Avenue, there was a pile of dirt, located nearer the street-car track than the right curb of the street. This pile of dirt was about a foot in height, and about three feet long, and was narrow on top. It had been placed there by the city authorities for use in repairing a small amount of pavement in that locality. About three or four o’clock,in the afternoon of the day in question, an employee of the city placed a lighted lantern upon this pile of dirt. The evidence shows without dispute that the lantern was an ordinary-sized lantern, with a red globe, and was properly filled and cleaned, and had a suitable wick. The party who placed the lantern upon the pile of dirt imbedded the base of the lantern about an inch in the dirt, to give it a footing, and as additional security placed a piece of cement, estimated in the evidence to be approximately six inches square, against the base of the lantern on the south side. As the driver of the automobile approached this pile of dirt, coming from the south, he did not observe the lantern and the pile of dirt until, as he claims, he was within some ten or fifteen feet of it. He had already seen a street car which was approaching from the north on East Ninth Street, which he locates as being at that time approximately a half block north of the intersection of the two streets. He did not attempt to pass to the right of the pile of dirt, although the evidence tends to show that there was room for him to have passed in safety between the pile of dirt and the curb on the right-hand side of East Ninth Street. The driver’s testimony is to the effect that he thought there was an opening in the pavement, so that he could not drive to the right of the pile of dirt. There was in fact no such opening. The driver did not attempt to stop his car, but he diverted the automobile to the left, to pass the pile of dirt, and the automobile was struck by the approaching street car and injured; and this suit is brought to recover for the damages so caused.

[691]*691I. The appellant submitted a motion for a directed verdict, on the ground that the evidence failed to show that it was guilty of negligence. This was overruled,

The evidence in behalf of appellee on this question must be considered in the light most favorable to appellee. The evidence shows that, at the time of the accident and immediately thereafter, the globe of the lantern located upon the pile of dirt was smoked, and that the light was obstructed thereby and made dim. The exact distance at which the red light could be observed by a person approaching from the south is variously estimated, and is somewhat uncertain, under the record. It was a bright, clear night, and the arc light on the corner aided somewhat in lighting the locality where the pile of dirt was placed.

The trial court held that the ease presented a question for the determination of the jury as to the negligence of appellant in regard to the manner of the placing of the lantern upon the pile of dirt. The city was not negligent per se in having the pile of dirt upon the street, provided that it took ordinary, usual, and reasonable precautions -to warn the public of the presence of such obstruction to travel. Shannon v. City of Council Bluffs, 194 Iowa 1294.

It is not seriously contended by appellee tliat the city was negligent in failing to adopt some other method than that of placing a red light upon the pile of dirt. The contention at this point narrows itself down to the single proposition as to whether or not appellant was negligent in the manner in which its employee placed the lantern upon the pile of dirt. It is claimed that appellant is liable for negligence because the employee placed a piece of cement upon the edge of the bowl of the lantern, and it is claimed that this caused the lantern to tip to one side, so that the globe became smoky and dimmed the light, and the same did not afford proper and adequate warning.

The evidence shows without dispute that the lantern was cleaned, and was in good condition, and was placed on top of the pile of dirt between the hours of three and four in the afternoon; that at that time it was burning properly; and that the bowl was imbedded about an inch in the dirt, in order to give the lantern security.

[692]*692Appellee does not contend that appellant was negligent to this point, but does contend that appellant’s employee was negligent in placing the piece of cement against the base of the lantern on the south side, and in leaving the lantern in this condition. There is no evidence in the record in regard to the condition of the lantern from the time it was placed upon the pile of dirt by the city workman, between three and .four o’clock in the afternoon, until at or about the time of the accident. There is evidence tending to show that, shortly after the accident, the lantern was found to be in a smoky condition, and the testimony is to the effect that it was then leaning slightly toward the south.

There is no evidence that the placing of the piece of cement against the base of the lantern caused the same to slant or tip to the south. This is a mere inference. There is evidence that the pile of dirt was soft, and there ,is some reference in the record to its being “sand.” Whether the lantern did tip to the south because of the placing of the piece of cement on that side of the base was wholly a matter of conjecture. It might have produced that effect, and it might not have produced it. The jar from the movement of’passing vehicles, the action of the wind, interference by children or animals, and many other things might have caused the lantern to tip quite as much as the placing of the piece of cement against the base, which was put there for the purpose of holding it upright and to prevent it from being dislodged. There is no claim whatever in the testimony that the lantern was originally placed in anything but an upright position, and no claim that, when it was left by the city workman, it was not in a proper condition. What caused the lantern to tip slightly from an upright position to a slanting position, so that the globe became somewhat smoked, is wholly a matter of conjecture and speculation.

The burden rested upon appellee to establish his allegation of negligence in failure to properly warn the public of the obstruction upon the street. We do not think that appellee carried this burden.

It is not seriously contended, and could not well be, but that the proper placing of a filled and lighted red lantern upon this pile of dirt three feet long and a foot high was a reasonable precaution to protect the public.

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 40, 197 Iowa 689, 1924 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1924.