Geers v. Des Moines Railway Co.

38 N.W.2d 89, 240 Iowa 783, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 14, 1949
DocketNo. 47429.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 N.W.2d 89 (Geers v. Des Moines 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
Geers v. Des Moines Railway Co., 38 N.W.2d 89, 240 Iowa 783, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Smith, J.

— The-.only .questions.on. this appeal, concern the claimed insufficiency of the evidence of defendants alleged negligence and of plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence. They were raised by appropriate motions which were overruled.

The collision occurred the evening of November 13, 1947, on Bast Fourteenth Street in Des Moines, a short distance south of its intersection with .Mattern-Avenue. Plaintiff 'was driving north, defendant’s streetcar was southbound; It was about, seven o’clock. The headlights on both vehicles were lit and lights inside streetcar were on.

Defendant’s carline along Bast Fourteenth Street was composed of a single track in the approximate middle of the street, except for occasional double track passing places at which the streetcars would of course turn to the right. . The. collision occurred at or near the south end of one of these passing places. The evidence is in some conflict as to whether the streetcar had cleared the switch and was back on the single track headed straight south or was still in the act of leaving the switch and was "pointed somewhat southeast.

Plaintiff had driven from Quincy, Illinois, that day, most of the way at, the wheel himself.. His sole companion was, Mrs. Sehachtsick. They were coming to visit plaintiff’s brother and had only been in Des Moines once.before — in' September, two *785 months earlier,' when he purchased the car, .a used Buick- convertible. ■ '• . , .

The collision,was not exactly head-on. One witness says “the left front corner of the streetcar collided with the left front side of'the automobile néar the left front wheel.”. Plaintiff was driving with his left wheels just inside or west of the east rail. There was testimony that just south of the switch the pavement bricks along the track were very rough, some on end and some completely gone; that there was a depression between the east rail and the bricks on the inside of the tracks, just on the west side of the east rail; that the bricks were gone “for quite a distance or several feet * * * 8 or .10 féet maybe, the bricks' were sunken and some were out so it left a shallow place; sort of like a ditch on the west side of the east rail.” The depression is also described in the record as extending 10 or 12 feet and there is testimony that extending for about a block south of the scene of the accident there were places where “the track was higher than the level of the pavement, and in other places lower than that level.”

The witness who gave the above-quoted testimony (Mr. Rtuhmans) lives on the east side of the street'opposite the placó'he describes. He was'an eyewitness'of the collision'and gives qiiité a definite description óf it: ' . ■ . • ,

“I saw the streetcar approaching from.- the north on the west side of the street on the west'passing track. I saw the. automobile approaching from the south. ’* * * I would- say the streetcar was traveling at a speed of 15 miles.an hour. .It didn’t seem to. decrease its speed before the collision.: The lights, of the .automobile were on. I did not hear any bell or signal sounded op the .street-, car. I would say the automobile was .traveling between 20 and 25 miles an hour before the accident, with the left wheels jus.t west of the east rail of the ear. track. The impact occurred just south ■ of the.switch-and right at the depression I have described., Just before the impact the front wheels. of the automobile turned toward the curb to the east. The automobile, did not.follow the direction of the wheels. The left front wheels skidded in the car track along, the groove, which is the .depression I have described. The front wheels turned toward the curb, and the left front wheels skidded along the car tracks for several feet. The collision *786 occurred after I observed the sliding. They collided just south of the switch. That is the rear of the streetcar wasn’t clear of the switch yet. I would say the rear trucks were still north of the south end of the switch when the impact occurred. As the automobile approached I could not see what the driver was doing in the automobile.”

The same witness also says on cross-examination: “The last I saw the automobile before the accident it was still skidding in the track.”

Both plaintiff and his companion were injured and rendered unconscious in the collision. They testified they were unable to remember much of anything after entering East Fourteenth Street from the east on University. Plaintiff says he was unconscious from the time of the collision (Thursday) until the following Wednesday. The undisputed testimony shows his injuries were terribly serious.

It is necessary to detail only enough of the evidence to show that there was sufficient to create a jury question as to both defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence, upon which issues plaintiff had the burden of proof. We have no hesitation in our approval of the trial court’s rulings on defendant’s motions.

I. The specifications of negligence ultimately relied on and submitted were: 1. Dangerous speed of streetcar in view of the “alignment of the switch” and condition of the track; 2. failure to keep proper lookout ahead; 3. failure to have proper control in view of the “alignment and contour of the track and the surface and grade of'the street”; 4. changing direction of streetcar in nighttime without warning by bell or otherwise; 5. last clear chance; and 6. failure to repair and maintain right of way as required by section 391.77, Code of 1946.

Defendant argues there was no evidence of negligence in any of the respects alleged and that the negligence, if any, “had ceased to operate at the time of the collision, and was not, therefore, the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury.”

We have set out enough of the evidence to show the jury could find defendant’s motorman was driving through the passing *787 place at 15 miles per hour. Another witness said “he was going pretty fast” — approximately 20 miles per hour; another said 15 to 18 miles per. hour and immediately before the accident 13 to 15. Another eyewitness (Mrs. Bummans) says the streetcar was “swinging back and forth as it came down the street.” She adds: “The only thing that I could say as to the speed was that as it approached us the frame of the ear was rocking from one side to the other at a swift rate of speed. That I do know, because I saw it.” A passenger describes how the streetcar was delayed some distance back and the motorman said “Now, I am late.”

Mr. and Mrs. Bummans, from whose testimony we have quoted, were sitting in their ear in their driveway almost directly opposite the scene of the collision, waiting to drive out on East Fourteenth Street. Of course the motorman (and perhaps others) testify differently as to speed but we are concerned here with the testimony most favorable to plaintiff. It was for the jury to determine the actual speed and Avhether, under the conditions shown, it constituted negligence.

Similarly, on the questions of lookout and control, it was for the jury to appraise the facts shown in the record and to determine AÁdiether the conduct of defendant’s employee in charge of the -car measured up to the standard of reasonable care.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 89, 240 Iowa 783, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geers-v-des-moines-railway-co-iowa-1949.