Hawthorne v. Delano

183 Iowa 444
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 183 Iowa 444 (Hawthorne v. Delano) 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
Hawthorne v. Delano, 183 Iowa 444 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Gatnor, J.

The plaintiff brings this action in two counts, one bottomed on a common-law liability, and the other bottomed on a claimed violation of Section 4945 of the Code of 1897, which reads:

“If any person, Avithout lawful authority, Avilfully dig up, disinter, remove or carry away any human body, or the remains thereof, from its place of interment; or aid, assist, encourage, incite or procure the same to be done or attempted ; dr Avilfully receive, conceal or dispose of any such human body or the remains thereof; or if any person, Avith [445]*445the intent to commit any of the aforesaid acts, partially perform the same; or if any person wilfully and unnecessarily, and in an improper manner, indecently expose, throw away or abandon any human body, or the remains thereof, in any public place, or in any river, stream, pond or other place, he shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not more than two years, or be fined not exceeding twenty-five hundred dollars, or both.”

The contention of the plaintiff is that, some time on the night of August 11, 1913", one Charles Hawthorne was killed by being pushed or kicked from one of defendant’s trains, known as No. 14, and the body left lying upon the track; that, while it was so lying, the company wrongfully mutilated it, thereby causing plaintiff, as the mother of the dead boy, to suffer great mental pain and anguish. The father assigned to this mother, plaintiff, an alleged cause of action existing in his favor, based upon the same facts. The body was discovered in the morning of the 12th, greatly mangled, and lying between the rails of. the track.-

Damages for the wrongful death of the decedent were settled in another action, and are not involved in this action. The only claim here rests upon the alleged wrongful act of the defendant in mutilating the body after death, resulting in great mental pain and suffering to the father and mother.

l. Appeal and error : effect °ersaineral re-This particular case was in this court before on appeal. The opinion of the court is found in 172 Iowa 44. On the former trial, this court found that the evidence in the record was insufficient ■ to justify a verdict for the plaintiff, and that a motion inter-r 7 posed by the defendant for a directed verdict should have been sustained. The case was accordingly reversed and remanded. Upon its return to the district court, the defendant filed a motion for judgment in its favor, based upon the fact that this court, on the [446]*446former appeal, judicially determined that the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict against it, and that the court to which it was remanded should, therefore, enter judgment in .its favor. This motion was overruled, and this is the first complaint made.

It will be noted that, on the first appeal, this court determined that, upon the record there made, the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict for the plaintiff. It did not detexmine that the plaintiff did not have a cause of action against the defendant, if the facts relied upon were proven. It reversed it simply because the evidence submitted on that trial did not justify a verdict against the defendant, and remanded it for retrial. It was then up to the plaintiff to introduce further evidence to support her contention. If no further evidence were offered upon the second trial than appeared upon the first trial, then the finding of this court upon that evidence would be conclusive upon plaintiff’s night to recover. But upon the retrial, — a retrial having been permitted by reversal, — plaintiff might offer further evidence supporting her contention, and a case might be made against the defendant sufficient at least to go to the jury.

Of course, on an appeal to this court in a law action, a finding by this court that the record does not disclose sufficient evidence to justify a verdict against the defendant, is not a finding that sufficient evidence does not exist to justify a finding against the defendant. So, upon reversal, unless otherwise ordered, it was up to the plaintiff to make a further showing in support of her contention, and to this end she introduced further evidence upon the issues tendered. This court, however, nmy, upon an examination of the whole record submitted to it on appeal, determine that all the evidence which either party can offer legitimately is before the court, and that it is insufficient to justify a verdict against the defendant.; and it may, thereupon, by special [447]*447order, direct the court to enter a judgment in the defendant’s favor. Or if, on appeal, it is found that, conceding all that plaintiff contends for as established, plaintiff has no cause of action, the court may, by proper order, dispose of the case on appeal, and so' direct the lower court. A simple reversal and remand of the case to the district court does not necessarily determine either of these questions, and does not necessarily end the case. The plaintiff may, if he has other testimony supporting his claim,-have a retrial and introduce further testimony and take the judgment of the court upon the case as then made. However, we have had occasion recently to pass upon this question, and our finding is against the contention of plaintiff on this point. See Owens v. Norwood-White Coal Co., 181 Iowa 948.

Upon the overruling of the motion for a directed verdict based upon the finding of this court upon the former appeal, the case proceeded to a retrial in the district court. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant moved again for a directed verdict, based upon the insufficiency of the evidence to justify a verdict against it. This motion was overruled. The theory on which this motion was overruled is that the record as made upon this second trial was'not the same as the record made upon the former trial; that further evidence bearing upon issuable facts was submitted by the plaintiff; and that this was sufficient to justify a submission of the cause to the jury. A verdict was returned for the plaintiff. The overruling of this motion is the second ground of complaint on the part of the defendant.

This requires an examination of the record as now before us. We will say, however, that the record is substantially the same as made on the former appeal, with the exception of two or three matters, to which attention will be hereafter called. The opinion on the former appeal recites fairly the facts as they then existed in the record, and at[448]*448tention is called to a recitation of facts there; and we will not attempt to repeat them here, but confine ourselves to a consideration of this added testimony which,.it is cláimed, distinguishes this record from the record on the former appeal.

On the former appeal, Earl Polk, upon whom the plaintiff relies specially to prove one of the material facts in this controversy, testified:

“I never saw him going to the cornfield; I saw him in the cornfield. The porter followed him along and then got on the train. Deceased ran parallel, inside the cornfield, going the same way as the train. At the cut, he slid down the bank, and caught the back end of the sleeper. He had hold of the train, and someone in blue uniform pushed him off. I was watching. He fell. I was looking out of the window near the middle of the chair car. The weather was warm. My window was up. I was leaning out as far as I dare without falling off. I never saw him since they pushed him off and he fell. He fell from the rear steps of the sleeping car.

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