Flannery v. Interurban Railway Co.

171 Iowa 238
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 21, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 Iowa 238 (Flannery v. Interurban 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
Flannery v. Interurban Railway Co., 171 Iowa 238 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

— On the afternoon of June 16, 1913, about 3 o’clock, the plaintiff and his wife and children were riding in an automobile. The wife was driving and plaintiff was sitting by her side. The children were in the rear seat.

The defendant is an interurban railway company and was operating one of its interurban cars on the streets of Des Moines. At this particular time, it was operating its car on Fourteenth Street. Fourteenth Street runs north and south. Capitol Avenue runs east and west. The plaintiff was proceeding eastward on Capitol Avenue. Defendant’s car was proceeding southward on Fourteenth Street. At the intersection of these streets, the collision occurred of which complaint is made. In the collision, the plaintiff claims that he and his wife were injured, and his automobile damaged. He brings this action to recover all the damages sustained, his wife having assigned to him her claim for damages against the company.

The negligence'charged against the defendant company is that it was running its car, at the time of the collision, negligently, in that it was driven at a dangerous rate of speed as it approached the crossing over which plaintiff was required to pass, and that the speed at which it was operated was in violation of the ordinance of the city, reading as follows:

“No car shall run at a greater rate of speed within the business portion of the city than eight miles an hour, nor [241]*241shall the same be run in any other portion of the said city at a greater rate of speed than twelve miles an hour.”

Defendant’s answer to plaintiff’s claim is a general denial. Upon the issues thus tendered, the cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned for the plaintiff, and judgment being entered thereon, defendant appeals.

It appears that, at the conclusion of all the testimony, the defendant filed the following motion for a verdict in its favor upon the record as made:

1. There is no sufficient evidence upon which the jury would be warranted in returning a verdict against the defendant in this case.

2. There is no sufficient evidence which would warrant the court in submitting the question of the defendant’s negligence to the jury in this case.

3. Under the evidence in this case, if a verdict were returned against the defendant by the jury, it would be the duty of the court to set such verdict aside.

4. The evidence in this case fails to show that the plaintiff or his wife or the driver of the automobile in question was free from contributory negligence.

5. The evidence in this case affirmatively shows that the plaintiff or his wife or the driver of the automobile in question was guilty of negligence which directly contributed to the injuries sued on and claimed in this action.

This motion was by the court overruled, and this action of the court is assigned as error. The correctness of the ruling depends upon the evidence before the court, at the time the motion was made. This evidence, so far as material, is substantially as follows.

We recite first the evidence about which there is practically no controversy in the record.

[242]*2421- SossinINrauaheyaarofkapstreet*1 raíi-car [241]*241Capitol Avenue, on which plaintiff was driving, is 32 feet between the curbing. Fourteenth Street is 34 feet wide, [242]*242substantially, and the distance' from the center of defendant’s track to the curbing east is 17 feet, 2 inches. From the center of the track to the curbing west is 17 feet, 3 inches. There is an alley opening on the west side of Fourteenth Street, north of Capitol Avenue. This alley is 18 feet wide. From this alley to the north curbing on Capitol Avenue is 156 feet, and the distance from the alley to the south curbing on Capitol Avenue is 188 feet.

Plaintiff and his wife claim that they were on Capitol Avenue, 60 or 70 feet west of defendant’s track, at the time they first saw the defendant’s car; that defendant’s car was, at that time, at or north of the alley; that plaintiff was driving his car three or four feet off the south curbing, — that is, the south side of the automobile was three or four feet from the curb line on the south side of Capitol Avenue; that they continued to drive in that position until immediately before the collision. Plaintiff testifies that he had a speedometer on his automobile; that he looked at it while proceeding eastward on Capitol Avenue, and saw and remembers that the automobile was traveling less than twelve miles an hour. Defendant’s car, then, must have traveled approximately 180 feet while plaintiff’s car was moving 60 or 70 feet. In order to bring about the collision, defendant’s car must have been traveling approximately about three times as fast as plaintiff’s car. If plaintiff’s car was traveling, as he says, at twelve miles an hour, defendant’s car must have been traveling approximately 35 or 36 miles an hour. Assuming that the defendant’s car was at the south side of the alley when first seen by plaintiff, and assuming that plaintiff was 70 feet from defendant’s tracks at that time, and assuming that plaintiff’s car was three feet in width (although there is no evidence of the width of the car), we have this state of the record: The north side of plaintiff’s car was six feet from the south curb line of Capitol Avenue, or 26 feet from the north curb line of Capitol Avenue. The north [243]*243curb line of Capitol Avenue is 156 feet from the south line of the alley. The north side of the ear then Avould have been 182 feet from the south line of the alley, or 182 feet south of defendant’s car at the time it was first seen by the plaintiff. Defendant’s car must have passed over a distance of 182 feet while plaintiff’s car was passing over a distance of 70 feet. Defendant’s car Avas then traveling two and three-fifths times as fast as plaintiff’s car. If plaintiff’s car was traveling at 12 miles an hour, defendant’s car must have been traveling at least 31 miles an hour.

The evidence discloses without controversy that defendant’s car came from the Avest on Grand Avenue and turned to the south at that point on Fourteenth Street; that when the car turned from Grand Avenue onto Fourteenth Street, it stopped, with the front end of the car about 52 feet south of Grand Avenue, on Fourteenth Street. The distance from the south curb line of Grand Avenue to the south side of Capitol Avenue is 354 feet. The south end of the car must then have been 302 feet from the south curb line of Capitol Avenue when it started south. At the time the car started, it was about 114 feet north of the south side of the alley, the point at which plaintiff first claims to have seen the car. The car then must have run about twice its length at the time it Avas first seen by the plaintiff. Defendant’s car Avas about fifty-two feet long.

Plaintiff claims that, at the time he first saAV the car, it appeared to him to be not exceeding the speed at which he was traveling, twelve miles an hour. Upon this point, the defendant’s testimony shows that you cannot start a car Avith a rush; that it has an automatic relay that prevents feeding the car too fast; that you can feed it only so fast, otherwise it trips, — the relay trips. The effect of the tripping is to disconnect the power. It throws the current off and you have to go back and start over again.

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Related

Dunham v. Des Moines Railway Co.
35 N.W.2d 578 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1949)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 Iowa 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-v-interurban-railway-co-iowa-1915.