McCornack v. Pickrell

2 N.W.2d 57, 231 Iowa 737
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 10, 1942
DocketNo. 45780.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 N.W.2d 57 (McCornack v. Pickrell) 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
McCornack v. Pickrell, 2 N.W.2d 57, 231 Iowa 737 (iowa 1942).

Opinions

*738 Wentstebstbum, J.

The appeal now before this court is the third one in connection with this ease. In the prior instances we passed upon two issues -raised in the respective appeals. After our second opinion was filed defendant presented in the district court an amendment to a prior motion to dismiss and for judgment. This motion was sustained and plaintiff has appealed.

The accident that occasioned this litigation occurred on September 7, 1935. The original petition was filed on July 12, 1937. The facts and circumstances of the accident are more particularly set out in the first two opinions to which reference will be made later.

The original action was brought on the theory that the plaintiff was a passenger in the Pickrell car for hire, and this theory and issue was submitted to a jury at the first trial and a verdict was returned for the plaintiff. Upon appeal to this court the district court was reversed and we held that under the evidence the plaintiff was not a passenger for hire and that the driver of the Pickrell car had to be guilty of recklessness before the plaintiff could recover. This first opinion was filed February 7, 1939, and is found in 225 Iowa 1076, 283 N. W. 899.

Thereafter the plaintiff amended her petition and alleged in an additional count that the driver was reckless in the operation of the Pickrell car at the time plaintiff was injured. The defendant, Pickrell, filed a demurrer to this new and additional count and asserted that any claim as to the reckless operation of the automobile was barred by the statute of limitations. The district court sustained this demurrer and the plaintiff refused to plead further in relation to this particular count of the petition and it was thereafter dismissed. Plaintiff again appealed to this court and the action of the district court in sustaining the demurrer was affirmed in an opinion filed November 19, 1940, which is found in 229 Iowa 457, 294 N. W. 746. Proce-dendo was issued by reason of our second opinion on December 21, 1940, and was filed in the district court on December 23, 1940. There was no petition for rehearing filed.

On or about January 25, 1940, and after defendant had demurred to count II of plaintiff’s petition, defendant filed *739 a motion to dismiss count I of the original petition. It should be noted that the demurrer to count II of the petition, which was passed on by ns in the second appeal, was filed on January 17, 1940. In the motion to dismiss and for judgment, it was asserted that plaintiff had committed herself by her testimony in the original trial, which testimony was held insufficient to afford a recovery, and only by a denial of her testimony given in the first trial could any other or different verdict be reached. The district court acting through Judge Homer A. Fuller on January 25, 1940, sustained the demurrer heretofore referred to and also on that date overruled the defendant’s motion to dismiss. In connection with the court’s ruling relative to the original motion to dismiss it made the following statement:

“I think the ruling on the last motion will be that the motion is overruled at this time and the cause will he continued in this Court pending the appeal in the Supreme Court on the ruling that has been made this morning on the motion as to Count II. If the Supreme Court sustains the lower Court here, why, of course, then would come the opportune time to dismiss the entire action unless some further showing was made to warrant its trial.”

Thereafter on March 2, 1941, after our opinion had been filed in the second appeal and procedendo had been issued thereon, the defendant filed an amendment to Ills original motion to dismiss and for judgment setting forth the facts as to the two particular grounds of action upon which defendant had sought recovery and further alleged that both of these grounds had been passed upon by this court in connection with the two previous appeals. Defendant further alleged in his amendment to motion to dismiss and for judgment that any evidence on a new trial seeking to change the relationship of the parties as disclosed by. the facts presented in the two previous appeals would of necessity be contradictory to the original positions taken and would merely constitute an invitation to the litigant to produce possible false testimony on retrial. Defendant as a further ground of his amended motion to dismiss alleged that plaintiff had not been diligent in the prosecution of this case *740 and had refused to take any action relative to it and had refused to resist the amendment to the motion and did not require the cause to he noted for trial. On the 27th of March, 1941, the amended motion to dismiss and for judgment was presented to the court, and after a hearing thereon an order was entered dismissing the case and further providing for judgment against the plaintiff for costs. As heretofore noted plaintiff has appealed from this order of dismissal and from the judgment that the court directed should be entered.

It is the contention of the appellant that the trial court erred in dismissing plaintiff’s case and in rendering judgment against her for costs, thereby preventing her from having another trial on count I of her petition, for the following reasons: (1) That when this case was reversed on the first appeal, 225 Iowa 1076, 283 N. W. 899, this court remanded the same for a new trial and did not order that the case be reversed without the plaintiff having a new trial; (2) that the failure, if any, of plaintiff’s attorneys to bring this case on for trial between December 23, 1940, and March 27, 1941, was not such a failure to prosecute as would entitle the defendant to have the action dismissed; (3) that the defendant could have brought said action on for trial between December 23, 1940, when the pro-cedendo was filed in the district court, and March 27, 1941, when the motion to dismiss was sustained, by filing on his own behalf a trial notice and having the case set down for trial in the district court; (4) that the record in this case failed to show any inattention on the part of the plaintiff which would entitle the defendant to have this case dismissed in the district court; (5) that under the whole record plaintiff is entitled to have this case again tried and she desires to have such trial. That she has more evidence which she can produce and that such evidence, she believes, will entitle her to have the case- submitted to the jury, under her claim that she was a paid passenger in the defendant’s automobile.

It will thus be observed that the main contention made on behalf of plaintiff is that she has more evidence which she can produce and that such evidence, she believes, will entitle her to have the case submitted to the jury, under her claim that she *741 was a paid passenger in the defendant’s automobile. The contention that the plaintiff was a paid passenger was the basis upon which the original case was submitted to the jury and it is now her claim that in denying her the right to present the new and additional evidence and in sustaining the motion to dismiss and for judgment the court was in error.

It should be kept in mind that the accident that brought about this litigation occurred on September 7, 1935.

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2 N.W.2d 57, 231 Iowa 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccornack-v-pickrell-iowa-1942.