Lawson v. Fordyce

21 N.W.2d 69, 237 Iowa 28, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 398
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 1945
DocketNo. 46717.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 69 (Lawson v. Fordyce) 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
Lawson v. Fordyce, 21 N.W.2d 69, 237 Iowa 28, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 398 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Bliss, J.—

This case has been tried three times in the district court. In the first trial there was a verdict for the plaintiff of $2,500, which was set aside.and a new trial granted by the trial court because of submitting a ground of negligence which it had stricken. In the second trial, at the close of all the evidence, the court sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict based upon the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to show any negligence of defendant which proximately caused the injury and was also insufficient to show plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence. On plaintiff’s appeal to this court the judgment entered against him, after .the adverse ruling on the motion to direct, was reversed for the reason that the court erred in sustaining the motion, since, under the record, the issues of negligence and freedom from contributory negligence should have been submitted to the jury. Lawson v. Fordyce, 234 Iowa 632, 12 N. W. 2d 301. Defendant presented a ninety-six-page petition and argument for rehearing to this court, which was denied. In the third trial the jury returned a verdict of $5,000 for plaintiff. In that trial the defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict after both sides had rested. While it contained a few more subdivisions than the motion to direct in. the second trial, the grounds were, in substance and effect, the same. A forty-four-ground motion for new trial and a thirteen-ground motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict were filed and overruled. On this appeal the defendant-appellant has filed briefs and arguments comprising two hundred sixty-two pages and containing twenty-seven assignments of error.

The second and third trials were tried upon -the sam,e petition and the same answer. The latter was a general denial. The petition, in substance, alleged: Plaintiff’s freedom from *31 contributory negligence; on January 9, 1940, while he was leading a cow easterly along the south part of the traveled portion of a highway in the town of Libertyville, Iowa, the defendant approached him from the rear in an automobile, which he was driving quietly, and passed plaintiff and the cow without giving any audible signal of his approach and without any knowledge on the part of plaintiff that he was so approaching, and startled and seared the plaintiff’s cow, causing her to lunge forward suddenly, striking the plaintiff and knocking him down, breaking his left hip; the defendant did not sound his horn or give any audible signal of his approach at a reasonable distance before passing the plaintiff, and under the circumstances, in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care should have done so; the graded portion of the highway was twenty-six feet in width and plaintiff was traveling along the south edge; the defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to give an audible signal of his approach at a point at a reasonable distance before passing him.

I. We have read the records in this appeal and in the first appeal. In the secohd trial the plaintiff testified and introduced the testimony of six witnesses. In the third and last trial he testified and used the same, witnesses. The testimony offered in behalf of plaintiff is strikingly the same in both of these trials. In the last trial some testimony was read from transcribed testimony and depositions used in earlier trials. In the second trial defendant was a witness and used four other witnesses. In the last trial he was a witness and used the same four witnesses of the second trial and two additional witnesses. The two latter were occupants of the Horn automobile and their testimony was merely cumulative to the testimony of the other two occupants of that automobile, who were witnesses for defendant in the last two trials. Cumulative testimony is not such additional evidence as materially changes the evidential record. Noyes v. Des Moines Club, 186 Iowa 378, 379, 170 N. W. 461, 3 A. L. R. 605; 5 C. J. S. 1281, 1283, section 1827; 3 Am. Jur. 553, 554, section 1000. Defendant’s witness Early, a surveyor who took some elevations and measurements along the highway and gave some testimony as to distances one could see along the highway from different points, *32 was a witness in the second trial • and his testimony therein was read in the last trial. Under this record material or substantial changes in the evidence would not-be expected and there were none. Some slight variations in the testimony received on behalf of defendant in the last trial are more favorable to the plaintiff than to the defendant.

The last two trials having been submitted on identical pleadings, with necessarily identical issues, and upon evidence substantially and materially the same, the application of the doctrine of “the law of the case” is of much importance in the determination of this appeal. It has been stated and applied by this court in scores of decisions and no discussion of it should be necessary except for a contention urged by the defendant. The principle is thus stated in Russ v. American Cereal Co., 121 Iowa 639, 640, 96 N. W. 1092:

“It is the settled rule in this state that■ the decision of this court upon the first appeal becomes the law of the ease, and is to govern upon a subsequent trial thereof in the district court, and upon another appeal, unless the facts before the court upon the second trial are materially different from those appearing upon the first.”

An aggrieved party may, by statute and the rules of this court, petition the latter for a rehearing on the appellate decision. But, such relief being denied, the said appellate decision becomes conclusively binding in the further progress of that case upon the litigants, the trial court on retrial, and the appellate court. This court, on a second appeal of the same ease, when the same rulings or legal questions are presented under substantially the same record, “will not revise, reverse, or review its former decision.’’ Burlington, C. R. & N. Ry. Co. v. Dey, 89 Iowa 13, 24, 56 N. W. 267, 271. “Likewise, matters necessarily involved in the determination of a question are settled by the decision when the same are again presented on a subsequent appeal.” 3 Am. Jur. 549, section 994. See, also, City of Hastings v. Foxworthy, 45 Neb. 676, 63 N. W. 955, 84 L. R. A. 321, 333. This court, by decision, has never departed from this settled rule stated in the above-noted cases.

It applies in all its force to the appeal before us. In our *33 decision on the first appeal we held that the evidence was of such weight, character, and sufficiency that the issues of whether the defendant was negligent as alleged, of whether such negligence and the failure to give warning with Ms horn as required by section 5034.41, Code of 1939, were the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, of whether the plaintiff was free from negligence contributing in any degree to his injury because of the manner in which and the places on the highway where he led the cow and because of the use he made of his senses of sight and hearing, should have been submitted to the jury for its determination.

These -holdings of this court were mandates to the trial court which it was required to carry out, subject to the pleadings, the issues, and the evidence introduced. Under the record it would have been error not to submit these issues to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 69, 237 Iowa 28, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-fordyce-iowa-1945.