Gipe v. Lynch

136 N.W. 714, 155 Iowa 627
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 N.W. 714 (Gipe v. Lynch) 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
Gipe v. Lynch, 136 N.W. 714, 155 Iowa 627 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

McClain, C. J.

A brief narrative of the circumstances under which the plaintiff receiyed the injuries for which he sought to recover damages will afford a sufficient basis for the discussion of the questions of law argued in behalf of appellant.

About 'half past six o’clock on a dark and rainy evening in the latter part of October the plaintiff, driving with his wife and two children in a single buggy along ■a highway and approaching a bridge, observed some vehicle coming toward him across the bridge which turned [629]*629out to be an automobile without lights. After the plaintiff saw the vehicle crass the bridge, he did not pay fui*ther attention to it, although, as he testified, he thought it to be a buggy and that it had been turned about and was being driven in the other direction. Plaintiff further testified that, when the horse he was driving came opposite to the automobile, the machine emitted a loud explosive noise and the horse jumped to the opposite side of the road, upsetting the buggy, and threw out plaintiff and his family with the result that plaintiff’s face and chest were bruised and two fingers on his left hand, around which one of the lines was wrapped, were strained and injured. The defendant voluntarily paid for the damage to the buggy in which plaintiff was driving, but plaintiff sued for the injuries received by him and for loss of time in his occupation resulting from such injuries.

The negligence .alleged was in operating the automobile upon the highway without a light, without any wanning of its presence, at a time when by statute the defendant was required to have lights on his machine, and in causing or permitting the automobile to suddenly and without warning give forth loud and explosive noises which .frightened plaintiff’s horse so that he became unmanageable and ran off the road into the ditch, overturning the buggy.

The court instructed the jury that before plaintiff could recover he must prove the material allegations of .the petition, which were, first, that the defendant was negligent in the matters charged in the petition, and, second, that plaintiff was free from negligence that contributed to the accident of which he complained.

[630]*630i. Automobile accident: contributory evidence06 * [629]*629I. One of the' alleged errors was in submitting to the jury any issue as to plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence; the contention being that there was no evidence on which the jury could base a finding that plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as would [630]*630defeat his recovery. But the plaintiff specifically alleged, as he was bound to do in such a case, that , *,11 he was driving his horse with due care and . was *ree ±vom- a&y negligence contributing to the accident, and there was evidence tending to dhow thalt, with knowledge of the presence of a vehicle between him and the bridge, he continued to drive his horse at high speed, holding one of his children in his lap so that he would not have an unobstructed view of the road in front of him, and attempting to pass by the vehicle without taking any precautions for his safety. True enough he testified that he thought the vehicle had been turned about and was going the other way, but, if it bad already recrossed the bridge, he could have seen it, for he had seem it approaching over the bridge, and the jury might well ¡have found that, under the circumstances, he did not take proper precautions in attempting 'to pass a vehicle which he had reason to believe was between him ■and the bridge. We are satisfied that under the evidence there was a question of contributory negligence for the jury.

2. Same: instructions harmless II. The criticisms of the court’s instruction with reference to contributory negligence are not well founded. After defining negligence in general and ordinary negligence, and also ordinary care as applicable 'to the conduct of defendant as well as of plaintiff, the court somewhat inaptly said that “contributory negligence is negligence not only on the part of the one committing the injury hut also on the part of the one upon whom the injury is committed and by which he contributed thereto.” But this inapt statement was followed in other instructions with a sufficient explanation of what would constitute contributory negligence, and could not have been in any way prejudicial to the plaintiff.

[631]*6313' ' [630]*630In another instruction the court told the jury that plaintiff could recover on account of the negligence of [631]*631defendant provided he h'ad 'shown “by a preponderance of the credible evidence that he himself was free from 'all negligence that contributed to the accident complained of.” The criticism of this instruction is in the use of the expression “'all negligence”; but clearly any negligence of the plaintiff that contributed to the accident complained of would preclude recovery by him on account of such accident, and, as thus qualified, the expression “all negligence” wa;s not erroneous or misleading.

4' ’ In another instruction the court told the jury that, if “plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence — that is, negligence that contributed in .any way to the accident and but for which it would not have occurred” —he could not recover, and the criticism of this instruction is- that the jury was 'thereby allowed to find plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence in being at the place where he was injured, inasmuch as if he had not been there the accident would not have occurred. But there is no warrant for placing such construction on the language used. It was proper to define contributory negligence as negligence that contributed in any way to the accident and but for which it would not have occurred, and the jury would not have been justified in assuming that any conduct on the part of plaintiff but for which the accident would not have occurred was in itself contributory negligence.

s' ' ‘ There was no warrant in the instructions for the assumption on the part of the jury that any negligence on the part of plaintiff, without regard to its proximate connection with the accident, either in itself or concurrently with the negligence of defendant, would defeat plaintiff’s recovery. This suggestion also meets the criticism of another instruction in which the jurors were told that, if they should find frlom the evidence that the accident occurred by reason of the negligence óf [632]*632boifch plaintiff and defendant, the plaintiff could mot recover.

6 Same-submission* of issue. III. There was no evidence -tending to show any other loud and sudden noise than that produced by the engine of defendant’s automobile in being allowed to run while -the machine was standing still at the side of the r(>a<l> and the court therefore properly refused to -submit to the jury any question in regard to the -alleged negligence of the defendant in allowing or causing his automobile to make without warning a loud -and sudden noise upon the highway, in the absence of anything in the evidence to indicate that defendant observed or in the exercise.

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136 N.W. 714, 155 Iowa 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gipe-v-lynch-iowa-1912.