Humphrey Ex Rel. Humphrey v. City of Des Moines

20 N.W.2d 25, 236 Iowa 800, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 16, 1945
DocketNo. 46741.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 N.W.2d 25 (Humphrey Ex Rel. Humphrey v. City of Des Moines) 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
Humphrey Ex Rel. Humphrey v. City of Des Moines, 20 N.W.2d 25, 236 Iowa 800, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Miller, C. J.

Plaintiff’s petition asserted: About two p. m., on June 25, 1944, he was opérating a Chrysler automobile on a graveled street known as Madison Avenue in the city of Des Moines, in the vicinity of East Seventeenth Street, when he ran into holes or ditches in the street, traveled some little distance and overturned, receiving personal injuries; that defendant city was negligent in failing to keep said street in repair and in a safe condition in that it allowed a deep hole or ditch to extend into and take up part of said graveled street, making it dangerous for those traveling in automobiles thereon; and that plaintiff was free from contributory negligence. De *801 fendant’s answer admitted that plaintiff’s automobile overturned on East Madison Avenue but denied that plaintiff ran into holes or ditches in the street, denied that defendant was negligent in maintaining said street, alleged that the street was in a reasonably safe condition for vehicles that were driven in a lawful manner at a lawful rate of speed, and denied that plaintiff was free from contributory negligence because he traveled at an excessive speed, failed to keep a proper lookout, and failed to keep the automobile under control. Plaintiff’s reply reasserted that plaintiff was free from contributory negligence.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence in chief the court directed a verdict for the defendant. Hence, we have only the plaintiff’s evidence before us. Plaintiff testified that he was proceeding east on Madison Avenue, approaching a railroad crossing; about one hundred feet west of the railroad crossing he passed in front of the residence of Leo Pickens; there were trees on both sides of the street in front of Pickens’ home and they cast shadows; as he neared Pickens’ house he saw two holes in the street slightly to the right of the center of Madison Avenue; he had started to slow down for the railroad crossing, and was not traveling more than twenty miles an hour; he saw the holes in the street when about fifty or sixty feet from them; he attempted to straddle the holes but hit the first one with his right front wheel; as that occurred his foot hit the accelerator, causing the car to increase its speed; just about then he hit the railroad tracks; before getting to the tracks he was headed toward the south side of the road at an angle but righted the car going toward the tracks and reached the north side of the street; then on the other side of the tracks there were some chuckholes and the car was in a bouncing motion from then on, a waving motion, until it upset; he did not think that he was pressing down on the accelerator after he hit the tracks, but the ear hit some loose gravel alongside of the road and he did not apply his brakes because the loose gravel would cause it to skid; the holes east of the tracks were not quite as large as those to the west; when his car struck them it was bounding and bouncing from side to side from the time he struck the first two holes; all of the time he *802 was trying to right it and to keep it out of the ditches; it finally went over to the north side and upset. On cross-examination plaintiff testified that at the time of the accident he was traveling at such a rate of speed that he could have stopped within sixty feet of a discernible object but did not stop.

Leo Pickens testified for plaintiff that Bast Madison Avenue in the vicinity of his home was a hard-packed surfaced oil-and-gravel road; the black-top surface was twenty-five to thirty feet wide; on each side there were ditches eight to twelve inches deep, from eighteen to twenty-four inches wide; the railroad crossing was the Chicago and Northwestern Bail-road, with one set of tracks; there were two holes in the surface of the black top in front of his house; they were from two to three feet apart, just to the right of the center as one proceeded east on Madison; the largest hole was directly north of his front door, had been there since freezing and thawing weather in the spring; as time went on and traffic crossed it, the hole kept getting larger; it was about three or four feet north and south, about three feet east and west, and measured three or four inches deep; it had “about a two-inch drop on the edges and then worked down in the center deeper, so that it was about four inches deep in the center and about two inches at the sides, and this two-inch drop was a straight-down drop that occurred about the same way all around the edge of the hole”; the other hole was just east of this one three or four feet, measured about two feet each way and was not quite as deep as the first hole, but it had the same two-inch drop all around the edge of the hole straight down; the street was like an ordinary graveled road, with little ruts and chuckholes here and there; “it was sort of wavy going from Sixteenth on, it wasn’t as bumpy from Sixteenth to Fourteenth,” from Sixteenth to Fourteenth it was bumpy all the way, an ordinary traveled road; “it was just an ordinary graveled road for a ways”; the waves were observable. On cross-examination he testified that he was home at the time of plaintiff’s accident, heard plaintiff’s car hit the hole in front of his home, looked up and saw plaintiff’s car, and, after it hit the hole, it was traveling at least forty to fifty miles an hour.

*803 Thomas Wheatley testified for plaintiff. He described the holes in the street in front of Pickens’ home, located them about as plaintiff and Pickens had done, and described them as about the size that they had, but he did not specify the depth of them. In fact, the testimony of Pickens is the most complete of the three witnesses, as to the condition of the street, and is not controverted by that of the other witnesses in any substantial respect. There was other testimony, of course, but the foregoing should be adequate for the purpose of our decision herein.

I. This appeal challenges the correctness of the court’s ruling on defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The first assignment of error asserts that the court erred in sustaining the motion generally in violation of Rule 118 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, which requires a separate ruling on each ground and forbids a sustaining of the motion generally. The ruling is not as specific as the Rule contemplates. In fairness to the trial court, however, it is quite apparent that it was convinced that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and the ruling on the motion was predicated primarily upon that theory. However, had the court sustained that ground of the motion only and overruled the rest, we would still be required to consider all grounds, if the appellee relied upon them. While the appellee could not base a cross-appeal on any of the grounds overruled, it could assert such grounds here as a basis for an affirmance. Wentland v. Stewart, 236 Iowa 258, 18 N. W. 2d 305, and cases cited therein. As a practical matter, appellant challenges each ground of the motion to direct and appellee undertakes to support each as a basis for affirmance. Hence, our situation is not materially affected by the form of the trial court’s ruling herein.

II. While, as above stated, the learned trial court based its decision primarily upon the theory that appellant was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, we are disposed to base our decision on the proposition that the evidence was insufficient to establish actionable negligence on the part of appellee city.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W.2d 25, 236 Iowa 800, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-ex-rel-humphrey-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1945.