Hartman v. Lee

272 N.W. 140, 223 Iowa 32
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1937
DocketNo. 43583.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 140 (Hartman v. Lee) 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
Hartman v. Lee, 272 N.W. 140, 223 Iowa 32 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

The accident causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate occurred about 5 -.30 p. m. on February 2, 1935, on Primary Road No. 65, known as the Jefferson Highway, at a point a short distance north of the city of Des Moines. At the point' where the accident occurred there is a graveled road from the west, called Pine Hill Drive, intersecting No. 65. At this intersection there is a store and filling station located on the north side of the graveled road and west of Primary Road No. 65. The decedent lived on No. 65 two and one-half miles north of this point, and had resided there for about four years prior to the accident. He was in the habit of walking from his residence to and from Des Moines. On the day of the accident he was returning from Des Moines, walking northward along the west edge of the pavement, as defendant’s witnesses say, or upon the shale shoulder near the west edge of the pavement, and had reached a point a few feet north of the center of the graveled road above mentioned when he was struck by the defendant’s Ford V-8 car, which was being driven north by the defendant on the said paved highway, No. 65, and which was, at the time, in the act of passing another ear going in the same direction. All agree that the decedent at the identical time of the impact was upon the pavement, traveling facing north, near the west edge of the pavement. He was struck by the bumper of the defendant’s car, precipitating him backward against the left headlight, and back over the left-front fender, his head coming in contact with the left corner of the framework of the body of the car, crushing his skull and inflicting other injuries from which he died four days later, never having regained consciousness. The pavement was dry. It was daylight. The sun was shining. There was nothing to obstruct the defendant’s view. For some distance the pavement was practically level. The pavement proper was 20 feet wide with smooth shale shoulders six to seven feet in width even with the surface of the pavement on each side, and, as one witness put it, the shale blends into the side of the pavement pretty closely along there. The shale was damp and wet on top and there was some water standing on the shale portion of the highway at or near the point where the accident occurred. Just prior to the accident, a few *34 hundred feet south, as the defendant was proceeding north, he overtook a truck and another car which was proceeding in the same direction. He passed the truck and turned back to the right side of the pavement because of two cars approaching him from the north, and as these two cars passed by, he then pulled to the left in order to pass the other car in front of him, and it was while passing this car that the accident occurred. We therefore have the situation, just prior to the accident, of the truck and the two cars proceeding northward, and the two cars proceeding southward, the decedent walking north along the edge of the west side of the pavement. Defendant was driving at a speed of approximately 30 or 35 miles per hour at the time he struck the decedent. It is the defendant’s theory, which the jury evidently must have believed, and which there was ample evidence to support, that the decedent was at all times walking off the pavement and upon the.shale, until just before the impact when he stepped off the shale onto the pavement directly in front of the defendant’s ear when the defendant’s car was within six or eight feet of the place where he was struck, and that therefore it was impossible to avoid striking him, and that by so doing the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence; while it is the plaintiff’s theory, and there is also evidence to support his theory, that the decedent was at all times walking upon the paved portion of the highway along the edge of the shale where he had a lawful right to be, and that there was ample space between the car on the right and the decedent to enable the defendant to pass, and that the decedent was not guilty of any negligence contributing to his injury, but that the injury was due to the negligence of the defendant in failing to keep a lookout and in failing to sound a warning in approaching and passing a pedestrian and in failing to have his automobile under control; and in failing to reduce the speed of his car in approaching and passing the decedent, and in driving his car at an excessive speed across an intersection in an attempt to pass a motor vehicle ahead.

The court submitted only two grounds of negligence, namely : (1) That the defendant suddenly drove his automobile to the left of the highway and upon that portion thereof upon which the decedent was walking without a warning signal of any kind of his intention so to do; (2) that he failed to have his automobile under control and failed to reduce its speed to a proper rate when approaching and passing decedent. And plaintiff’s chief *35 complaint lies in the court’s failure to submit the allegation of negligence contained in the petition, of the defendant’s failure to keep a proper lookout. This complaint presents the only close question in the case.

From the discussion between court and counsel, in ruling upon the motion for a new trial, which is set out in the abstract, the distinguished and able trial court recognized that this matter presented a borderline question and fully considered and weighed the matter, both at the close of plaintiff’s evidence in chief, and at the time the instructions were given and again in ruling upon the motion for new trial, and acted according to his best judgment deliberately, and was fearful of injecting error into the record should he submit this ground of negligence, because of a lack of evidence to support the same. Let us look at the record. Defendant and the three other occupants of his car all testify that they saw the decedent from the time they passed the truck and observed that he was walking on the shale. They all testify that he was never on the paved portion until the defendant got within six or eight feet of him, when he stepped onto the pavement, directly in front of defendant’s car. Defendant testified that he was looking straight ahead of him as he was passing this car. He says: ‘ ‘ From the time I started around the head car until the-very moment of impact, I was looking straight ahead. In the interval of time when I started to go around the head ear on the paving Hartman (decedent) did not look back. During that time, distance and space, Hartman did not give any signal that he was changing his course of travel. Hartman was on the pavement when I came in contact with him. Q. Now do you have any judgment or memory as to the distance you traveled from the time you saw Hartman step on the pavement until you came in actual contact with him? A. I would say not over eight feet. Q. What, if anything, had Hartman done, or did he do, other than walking along the shoulder as you have described it just before he stepped on? A. Nothing. * * * When I sounded the two signals Mr. Hartman didn’t do anything only walk right straight ahead.”

The three other occupants of defendant’s car, two in the back seat and one in the front seat, testified in substance to the same facts. After the accident, at the point near where the impact occurred, there were three footprints, apparently made by someone stepping from the wet shale onto the pavement, two *36 pointing eastward and one pointing northward.

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Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 140, 223 Iowa 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-lee-iowa-1937.