Meyer v. City of Des Moines

475 N.W.2d 181, 1991 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 343, 1991 WL 181929
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 18, 1991
Docket90-93
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 475 N.W.2d 181 (Meyer 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
Meyer v. City of Des Moines, 475 N.W.2d 181, 1991 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 343, 1991 WL 181929 (iowa 1991).

Opinions

LAVORATO, Justice.

The defendants appeal from jury verdicts in a bifurcated trial arising out of a person[183]*183al injury action. The defendants raise issues concerning jury instructions, sufficiency of the evidence, and taxation of costs. We reverse and remand for new trial on liability only because of errors in several instructions.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On March 23, 1987, fifteen-year-old David Lee Meyer was returning home from a friend’s house on a moped. His moped collided with a garbage truck owned by the city of Des Moines. Don Willis Prugh was driving the truck.

Just before the collision, David was traveling southbound on a residential street in Des Moines. The truck was going north. Before impact, the truck passed a parked car in the northbound lane and moved into the southbound lane. The point of impact was in the southbound lane — David’s lane.

Prugh saw David a distance away before the collision. David was looking down instead of ahead. The moped was going about twenty-five miles per hour, and the truck was moving slowly and braking.

David, who was not wearing a helmet, was knocked unconscious by the collision. He was admitted to a hospital in serious condition with multiple injuries including severe brain damage.

In January 1988 David’s parents, on his behalf and individually, sued the city and Prugh. The Meyers alleged numerous specifications of negligence against the two defendants and sought damages from them because of the collision.

In their answer, the defendants asserted two affirmative defenses: David’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of his injuries, and his damages should be reduced in proportion to his contributory fault. Later, the defendants were allowed to amend their answer to include the affirmative defense of failure to mitigate damages.

The district court, Judge George W. Bergeson, bifurcated the trial into two phases: liability and damage. This was done at the Meyers’ request and over the defendants’ resistance.

The liability phase of the trial was heard by a jury which found David to be fifty percent at fault and the defendants fifty percent at fault. Judge Theodore H. Miller, who presided at this phase of the trial, overruled the defendants’ posttrial motions. In those motions the defendants claimed that the evidence was not sufficient to support the jury’s apportionment of fault and that certain jury instructions were erroneous.

The defendants appealed. This court treated the appeal as interlocutory and dismissed it. See Iowa R.App.P. 2.

Judge Rodney Ryan presided at the damage phase of the trial, which was also heard by a jury. Pursuant to the jury’s special verdict answers, Judge Ryan entered judgment for the Meyers and against the defendants in the amount of $136,500. Judge Ryan overruled the defendants’ post-trial motions. The judge also overruled the defendants’ application for retaxation of court costs.

The defendants appealed, raising numerous issues which we consider in the following order.

II. Jury Instructions.

A. Iowa Code section 321.275(4): Full use of a lane.

During the liability phase, Judge Miller instructed the jury in Instruction No. 8 on the specifications of negligence alleged by the Meyers. Specification 3 stated: “In depriving the plaintiff David Lee Meyer of his full lane of travel.”

In Instruction No. 17 the judge expanded on this specification: “A motorized vehicle shall not be operated in any manner so as to deprive a motorized bicycle (moped) operator of the full use of a lane.”

These instructions are based on Iowa Code section 321.275(4) (1987), which provides:

Persons shall not operate motorcycles or motorized bicycles more than two abreast in a single lane. Except for persons operating such vehicles two abreast, a motor vehicle shall not be operated in a manner depriving a motorcycle or motor[184]*184ized bicycle operator of the full use of a lane. A motorcycle or motorized bicycle shall not be operated between lanes of traffic or between adjacent lines or rows of vehicles. The operator of a motorcycle or motorized bicycle shall not overtake and pass in the same lane occupied by the vehicle being overtaken unless the vehicle being overtaken is a motorcycle or motorized bicycle.

The defendants objected to instruction numbers 8 and 17 in a timely manner. The gist of their objections was simply that section 321.275(4) only applies to vehicles traveling in the same direction. And since the evidence was that the garbage truck and moped were traveling in opposite directions, the instructions should not have been given.

The defendants urged in their posttrial motions as they do here that it was prejudicial error for the court to give these instructions. For reasons that follow we agree.

The key to the defendants’ contention is whether the legislature intended the statute to operate in the manner the defendants argue. That intent is not clear so we apply statutory rules of construction to ascertain it. See Iowa Code § 4.6. One of those rules permits us to consider “former statutory provisions, including laws upon same or similar subjects.” Id. at 4.6(4).

Iowa Code section 321.275 became law in 1969. 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 204. Then, the statute had twelve subsections. One of those subsections tracked what is now section 321.275(4) — depriving a motorized bicycle operator of the full use of a lane. Those subsections track various sections of the Uniform Vehicle Code (UVC) (rev. ed. 1968), which were incorporated into Traffic Laws Annotated (TLA) (1979). These TLA sections are simply rules governing the operation of motorcycles. And these rules were proposed by the National Committee on Uniform Traffic Laws and Ordinances in 1968.

The legislature has amended section 321.-275 twice since 1969: in 1976 and in 1980. See 1976 Iowa Acts ch. 1165 § 45; 1980 Iowa Acts ch. 1094 § 28. However, the

subsection in question — 321.275(4)—re-mained intact.

Section 321.275(4) is substantially identical to section 11-1303 of the TLA. So we consider the language of section 11-1303 and the comments to it as a persuasive authority on legislative intent. Cf, Slager v. HWA Corp., 435 N.W.2d 349, 352 (Iowa 1989) (considering the Uniform Comparative Fault Act and the official comments to it as persuasive authority on legislative intent of Iowa’s comparative fault statute which is patterned after the Uniform Act).

Section 11-1303 of the TLA provides:
(a) All motorcycles are entitled to full use of a lane and no motor vehicle shall be driven in such a manner as to deprive any motorcycle of the full use of a lane. This subsection shall not apply to motorcycles operated two abreast in a single lane.
(b) The operator of a motorcycle shall not overtake and pass in the same lane occupied by the vehicle being overtaken.
(c) No person shall operate a motorcycle between lanes of traffic or between adjacent lines or rows of vehicles.

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Meyer v. City of Des Moines
475 N.W.2d 181 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
475 N.W.2d 181, 1991 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 343, 1991 WL 181929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1991.