Hutchinson Purity Ice Cream Co. v. Des Moines City Railway Co.

172 Iowa 527
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 20, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 172 Iowa 527 (Hutchinson Purity Ice Cream Co. v. Des Moines City Railway Co.) 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
Hutchinson Purity Ice Cream Co. v. Des Moines City Railway Co., 172 Iowa 527 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Deemer, C. J.

The negligence charged against the defendant street car company was: “That the defendant’s employee in charge and who had the management and control of the car that ran into plaintiff’s automobile truck was guilty of gross carelessness and negligence in running said car at a great rate of speed and in failing to stop said caías soon as by the exercise of reasonable care it could have stopped after the said employee saw or by the exercise of reasonable care could have seen the danger of said collision and thus avoided the injury.”

This was amplified somewhat by a recitation of evidentiary facts to the effect that, after plaintiff’s driver had stopped the automobile which he was driving upon one of the defendant’s tracks, the motorman in charge of the street car failed and refused to stop or in any way lessen the speed of [529]*529said car, but allowed the car to continue upon its westward course and with great speed ran upon and into and struck plaintiff’s truck with such force and violence as to carry said truck west along said avenue for a distance of forty-five or fifty feet from the Thirty-fifth Street crossing, before defendant’s car was stopped.

1. Railroads : accident at crossing: street ran-toCstop -a“iast clear chance.” The testimony introduced upon the part of the plaintiff tended to show that, on the day of the accident, plaintiff, through its employee, one McCarthy, whose duty it was to drive an automobile truck, was delivering ice cream at what was known as Reppert s Drug Store, situated at the northwest corner of the intersection of Thirty-fifth Street and ingerson Avenue, in the city of Des Moines. This drug store was on the lot line of the two streets, with a door in the corner of the building. The driver of the machine backed it up to the store from Thirty-fifth Street on the curb, so as to clear the sidewalk running east and west. He stopped the car north of this sidewalk and as near the southeast corner of the building as he could get and leave the sidewalk clear for travel, the engine headed almost directly east. At this point, Thirty-fifth Street runs practically north and south, and Ingersoll Avenue, east and west. Defendant occupied Ingersoll Avenue at this point with a double track, the east-bound cars running on the south track and the west-bound on the north one — the tracks being approximately 10 feet apart. It took the employee about half an hour to make the delivery of his goods, and upon completing his task he came out of the building, got upon the truck, started his engine, and, as he did so, he looked to the east to see if a west-bound car was approaching. He could have seen a car at this point quite plainly for a distance of something like 600 feet. Beyond that point, an approaching car was more or less obscured, for the reason that at 600 feet, the car would be on the crest of a grade. By careful examination, he might have seen a car something like 800 feet away. The driver testified that he saw no car and [530]*530he swung his automobile to the south and took practically the middle of Thirty-fifth Street, intending to cross the street car tracks. As he neared the crossing, he noticed a ear coming from the west less than a block away, and, judging from the action of the motorman and his manner of handling the car that he was not going to stop for Thirty-fifth Street, he concluded not to chance crossing ahead of the ear and applied his brakes, including the emergency, with which the car was equipped, intending to wait until the east-bound car had passed. He said that the front wheels, when he stopped, were just over the. south rail of the north track, and the rear ones some distance to the north of the north rail. At this instant, he heard a noise, and, looking to the eastward, he for the first-time discovered a west-bound car, running at a high rate of speed, bearing down upon him. When he first saw this car, it was about 270 feet from where his truck was standing. As soon as he saw it approaching, he released his emergency brake and attempted to back off the track, but was unable to do so; ■and the street car struck the automobile just ahead of 'the center, pushing or throwing" it something like 45 feet westward of the center line of Thirty-fifth Street.

He testified that- the street ear was running at the rate of 30 miles an hour; he also testified, as an expert motorman having experience, that a ear going at 20 to 30 miles per hour could be stopped within 3 car lengths, or approximately 90 feet. This witness was corroborated to some extent by other testimony, and other witnesses stated that the automobile was standing still, waiting for the east-bound ear to pass, for some little time before it was struck by the west-bound car. Other witnesses testified that the street car was running at from 12 to 15 miles per hour, and some of the testimony indicates that it was going at even, less speed. The motorman testified that he was going about 8 miles per hour and that, at this rate of speed, the car could not have been stopped short of 100 feet. There was some testimony that the truck driver heard no ringing of bell or sounding of gong upon the street car,, and [531]*531also some testimony that the street car did not slacken its speed as it came to Thirty-fifth Street.

Defendant’s witnesses gave quite a different version of the affair. The motorman testified:

‘ ‘ The motor truck, when I first saw it, was just east of the drug store, just a few feet fr,om the south curbing of Thirty-fifth Street; that is, it would be the south side of the drug store, the curbing that runs east and west.’’ Q. “Which way was he headed when you saw him?” A. “He was headed south.” Q. “Just tell the jury what happened as your ear came up to that street intersection.” A. “Well, this time this man with the motor truck was going at a slow rate of speed towards the track. When he got within about 12 feet of the track, his car slowed down and apparently he was going to stop. The ear did come almost to a stop and I figured that he was going to stop there and let me go by, and I released my air on my car, and of course she naturally went a little bit faster. - And he kept coming on to the track, and I saw that I was going to hit him and I applied the brakes the second time, but I was too close to do any good. ’ ’ Q. “When you first saw this man, did you put your brakes on then?” A. “Yes, sir.” Q. “And then when he came towards the track and stopped, as you say about 12 feet away, apparently came to a standstill, was it then that you released your brakes?” A. “Yes, sir. ” Q. “And then when he started up again, did you put your brakes on again then?” A. “Yes, sir.” Q. “What do you call it?” A. “I give it the emergency; that is, applying the brakes to their full extent.” Q. “Was that the quickest way to stop your car?” A. “Yes, sir; that is the quickest way, and it is the only way I had time to do anything. My car and the truck collided. My car pushed the motor truck about 10 feet. This motor truck, at the time of the collision, was on the west side of Thirty-fifth Street. He came straight south from the curb line.”

It was for the jury to determine which version of the acci[532]*532dent was the correct one, and, for the purpose of determining whether the verdict has enough support in the testimony, we must adopt that view most favorable to plaintiff.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
172 Iowa 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-purity-ice-cream-co-v-des-moines-city-railway-co-iowa-1915.