Liddle v. Hyde

247 N.W. 827, 216 Iowa 1311
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1933
DocketNo. 41759.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 827 (Liddle v. Hyde) 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
Liddle v. Hyde, 247 N.W. 827, 216 Iowa 1311 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

On the evening of June 27, 1931, at about the hour of 7 o’clock, and while it was still light, the appellee was driving east on Eighth avenue in the city of Marion, Linn county, Iowa, and the appellant was driving south on Eighteenth street. Both appellant and appellee were driving old Model T Fords. Eighth avenue runs'east and west, and is a paved thoroughfare 30 feet in width from curb to curb. Eighteenth street runs north and south, intersecting Eighth avenue, and is 20 feet in width from curb to curb. Ninth avenue is to the north of Eighth avenue, and Seventh avenue is to the south of Eighth avenue. Seventeenth street is’ west of Eighteenth street, entering Eighth avenue from the south and ending at Eighth avenue. The distance from the east curb line of Seventeenth street to the west curb line of Eighteenth street is 144.6 feet, forming a short block. The distance from the south line of Ninth avenue to the north line of Eighth avenue is approximately 290 feet. On the south side of Eighth avenue, between Seventeenth street and Eighteenth street, there are two houses. The house situated at what would be the southwest corner of the intersection of Eighteenth street and Eighth avenue is known in the record as the Bowen house. The house situated at what would be the southeast corner of the intersection of Seventeenth street and Eighth avenue is known in *1313 the record as the Hibner house. From Seventeenth street to Eighteenth street on, Eighth avenue there is no house on the north side that interferes with the view to the north as one proceeds from Seventeenth street to Eighteenth street, and a view can be obtained to the north without any obstruction from Seventeenth street to Eighteenth street as far as Ninth avenue. On the southeast corner of the intersection of Eighteenth street and Eighth avenue is located the Price home. On the northeast corner of the intersection in question is located the residence of Dr. Skinner. The first house on the west side of Eighteenth street north of Eighth avenue is that of De Witt Smith; this house being approximately 180 feet north of the intersection.

The appellee, a married w-oman 41 years of age, purchased the automobile she was driving at the time of the accident about two months prior thereto. On the day of the accident, she entered Eighth avenue some four or five blocks west of Seventeenth street, at which time she was driving at a little less than twenty miles an hour according to her speedometer. After she passed the intersection at Seventeenth street, she again looked at the speedometer, and her car, according to the speedometer, was traveling at the rate of twenty miles per hour. After looking at the speedometer after passing Seventeenth street, and observing the reading thereof, the appellee looked to the north, and testified that there was no car on Eighteenth street between Eighth and Ninth avenues at that time. She continued at the identical speed of twenty miles per hour from the time she looked at her speedometer after passing Seventeenth street until the happening of the accident in question. After she looked to the north, she looked straight ahead until she came to the Bowen house, near the southwest corner of the intersection of Eighth avenue and Eighteenth street, and when she was first able to see to her right south on Eighteenth street. She looked to the right on down Eighteenth street, to the south, just as soon as it was possible for her to see in that direction. She continued to look to her right until she entered the intersection. She was some place in the first half of the intersection when she again looked to the north. At that time the Hyde car was entering Eighth avenue from the north on Eighteenth street. The car driven by the appellant was proceeding south on Eighteenth street. According to the appellant’s testimony, he was proceeding at the rate of fifteen miles per hour. The cars came together with the right front fender and the right front *1314 wheel of appellant’s car coming in contact with the left running board and door of appellee’s car. Appellant’s car, after the accident, came to a stop with the front -wheels on a line with the east curb line of Eighteenth street and with the right wheels of his automobile as it was headed east, perhaps a foot or a foot and a half south of the -center of Eighth avenue. Both of the right wheels of appellee’s car came in contact with the south curb, breaking them off, and the car tipped over, causing the injuries to the appellee. The appellee received a gash on the left wrist about five inches long. It extended from the wrist up into the center of the back of the hand. The flesh was torn so that the ligaments to the thumb and the bone of the wrist could be seen.

The cause was submitted to the jury, and the jury returned a verdict for the appellee in the amount of $2,773.45.

The appellant cites a large number of errors as grounds for a reversal, hut relies principally upon the errors which will be taken up in this opinion. The appellant argues with a great deal of force that the court erred in' overruling the motion of the appellant to discharge the jury and declare a mistrial on account of the voluntary statement of the appellee while on the witness stand. The appellee, while a witness in her own behalf, was asked whether or not she heard a conversation at her home the morning after the accident, between her husband and the appellant, Mr. Hyde, and the appellee testified that she heard Mr. Hyde ask her husband how she was, and he wanted to know if there was anything that he could do. She was then asked the question, “Who- said that?” and she answered:1 “Mr. Hyde. I know I am to blame. I will do anything I can. Let me know what the company does. If it is no good, I don’t want it.” The appellant, immediately following said statement, made a motion to strike the answer, and also- a motion to discharge the jury and declare a mistrial, for the reason that “it is a clear attempt on the part of the plaintiff (appellee) to convey to the jury the information that the defendant (appellant) is protected by insurance; * * * that such an attempt to inject any such information into this record is improper and is calculated to inflame and prejudice the jury against the defendant (appellant).” The court immediately struck that part of the testimony from the record and overruled the motion to dismiss the jury and declare a mistrial. The court later, in its instructions, admonished the jury *1315 to “disregard such testimony and not discuss or consider it, nor allow it to influence you in arriving at your verdict.”

This court, in the case of Stilson v. Ellis, reported in 208 Iowa 1157, on page 1169, 225 N. W. 346, 352, says:

“A new trial is demanded because there were injected into the record, appellants assert, references to the fact that they were carrying liability insurance. We have read the evidence in this regard with great care, and are convinced that whatever may have been said in reference to this subject was not such as to demand a reversal of the judgment below. Witnesses brought this matter before the jury by relating conversations that took place in the Ellis home immediately after the accident. Mrs. Ellis herself made statements regarding this insurance. Assuming that what was said by the Ellises at that time was admissible as an admission against interest (as the record seems to show), it cannot he complained because a part thereof referred to the liability insurance.

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Related

Hutchins v. La Barre
47 N.W.2d 269 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1951)
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255 N.W. 493 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 827, 216 Iowa 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liddle-v-hyde-iowa-1933.