Gregory v. Suhr

277 N.W. 721, 224 Iowa 954
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
DocketNo. 44004.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 721 (Gregory v. Suhr) 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
Gregory v. Suhr, 277 N.W. 721, 224 Iowa 954 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Richards, J.

At about midnight on March 3, 1934, plaintiff was a traveler in an automobile proceeding westerly from Davenport toward Durant on Primary Highway No. 6. The car was being driven by its owner, one Craig. At the same time defendant Suhr was driving a Ford car easterly upon this highway. At a point about 3 miles east of Durant the two cars came into collision, resulting in physical injuries to plaintiff. Claiming that his injuries were caused by defendant Suhr’s negligence, plaintiff brought this action for damages. Upon trial a verdict was returned for plaintiff and judgment rendered thereon. Defendant has appealed.

Defendant’s first assignment of error is predicated on a claim that he pled in his answer that the collision of the cars was solely and proximately caused by the negligent acts of Craig, the driver of the car in which plaintiff was riding. Defendant urges that because he so pled the court erred in failing to instruct the jury “upon said pleaded issues and affirmative defenses.”

What defendant in fact stated in his answer was, in sub *956 stance, tbat tbe direct independent and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries was tbe negligence of Craig in failing to drive at a careful and prudent speed in view of tbe fact tbat tbe nigbt was dark and foggy, resulting in materially reduced visibility. But such alleged negligence of Craig, a third .party, would not afford a defense if it concurred with negligence of defendant in causing the injury. Tbe alleged negligence of Craig in itself would present a defense only in tbe event tbat such negligence amounted to tbe sole proximate cause of tbe injuries suffered. It will be noted that defendant’s answer does not in terms state tbat Craig’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. But if tbe words chosen by defendant were intended in tbat sense, be failed to advise tbe court tbat such was the purport of bis pleading, as could have been done by requesting an instruction such as it is now claimed the court on its own motion should have given. Defendant did not ask for a specific instruction and we are of tbe opinion tbat tbe instructions were sufficient, and that defendant, having seen fit to request no amplification, cannot complain. Tbe instruction given was tbat to recover, plaintiff must establish by tbe preponderance of tbe evidence tbat defendant was guilty of negligence and tbat such negligence was tbe proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. Under such instructions tbe jury could not find defendant guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the injury, if the evidence showed that tbe negligence of some third party was tbe sole proximate cause. And if, under this instruction, tbe jury found tbat defendant was negligent and tbat this negligence was tbe proximate cause of the accident, any negligence on the part of Craig could not be the sole proximate cause. If in following tbe instruction tbe jury found that defendant was negligent, and tbat his negligence was tbe proximate cause, defendant could not be prejudiced by a failure of tbe court to instruct tbe jury to consider an alleged sole proximate cause which could not exist. Lang v. Siddall, 218 Iowa 263, 254 N. W. 783; Stringley v. Crawford, 219 Iowa 509, 258 N. W. 316; Newland v. McClelland & Son, 217 Iowa 568, 250 N. W. 229.

Defendant’s answer contained an allegation that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in that he was aware of tbe fog and surrounding circumstances, and knew tbe dangers of traveling under sueb conditions and continued to thus travel *957 without warning or protest, although, owing to the fog, the lights of the car in which he was riding were not visible at a distance of 500 feet and did not disclose a substantial object 75 feet ahead of the ear. Defendant says the court did not specifically instruct with respect to these allegations, to the prejudice of defendant. But the jury was charged generally with respect to negligence and contributory negligence including an instruction that it is the duty of every person at all times and in all situations to use the care which an ordinarily prudent person would use under the circumstances to avoid injury to his own person, in order to be in a position to recover damages, and a failure to exercise such care, if injury results therefrom, in whole or in part, constitutes contributory negligence. Defendant does not challenge the correctness of the instruction, and in our opinion, in the absence of any request for a more particular application of the instructions to these purported facts alleged in his answer, defendant may not be heard to complain of the sufficiency of the instructions. These allegations in the answer, with reference to which defendant claims there should have been a special instruction, were but statements of evidentiary matters, of the surrounding circumstances, of the ■fact that there was darkness and a fog, of the reduced visibility, and were but a portion of the conditions and circumstances that existed. The jury was instructed to give consideration to all the conditions and circumstances. Upon the record before us the reasonable view of the situation is that, under the instructions that were given, the jury took into consideration the circumstance that there was a fog, and its effect on visibility, as well as the other surroundings, when it weighed the acts of plaintiff with respect to contributory negligence and that a reversal is not warranted. In Van Norman v. Modern Brotherhood, 143 Iowa 536, 551, 121 N. W. 1080, 1085, it is said:

“The practice of embodying in an instruction a recital of facts on which a party relies is not to be encouraged because of the tendency to thereby unduly magnify the importance of the matters thus selected for special mention.”

See, also, Conover v. Hasselman, 199 Iowa 661, 202 N. W. 502, and Whitman v. C. G. W. Ry. Co., 171 Iowa 277, 153 N. W. *958 1023. In Kelly v. C. R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 138 Iowa 273, 277, 114 N. W. 536, 538, 128 Am. St. Rep. 195, it is stated:

“It is not often practicable, and still less often advisable, for the trial court in framing its instructions to make specific mention of the items of evidence bearing upon any given issue. The office of an instruction is to state the rule of law applicable and pertinent to the matter to be determined, and not to marshal the evidence, or by special mention to give undue prominence to any particular phase or feature of the fact ease made by either party to the controversy. Nor can the court be expected to give express or special warning against every possible mistake or misapprehension into which the jury may fall in the discharge of its functions. Something must be left to the intelligent apprehension and application by the jurors themselves of the general rules stated in the court’s instructions. It may, and does occasionally, happen that some unfairness in argument of counsel or some other circumstance out of the ordinary arising in the course of the trial suggests to the court the propriety of guarding against prejudice therefrom to either party by an instruction covering the specific matter thus imported into the c.ase. When and to what extent instruction of this nature shall be given rests very largely in the sound and impartial discretion of the court.”

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 721, 224 Iowa 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-suhr-iowa-1938.