Read v. Reppert

194 Iowa 620
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 194 Iowa 620 (Read v. Reppert) 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
Read v. Reppert, 194 Iowa 620 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

ARTiiur, J.

The plaintiff, a stenographer, 21 years of age, rode in a Hudson Super She automobile with L. J. Brooks from the business section of the city of Des Moines, starting a little after 6 o’clock in the.evening, out into a residence section, to the corner of Thirty-sixth Street and Woodland Avenue, a distance of perhaps 30 odd blocks. The car stopped on the north side of Woodland Avenue, immediately west of Thirty-sixth Street, headed west. The plaintiff, who had been riding in the rear seat, alighted on the north side of the automobile, and stepped upon the pavement between the north side of the automobile and the north curbing of Woodland Avenue. The automobile had a top, which was up, and the side curtains were drawn. It was dark. Immediately after alighting from the automobile, ■ plaintiff stepped around the back end of the car, which moved on toward the west, and started south across Woodland Avenue, to go to a house, No. 747 Thirty-sixth Street, on the south side q£ the street. While in thfe act of crossing Woodland Avenue, she was struck by a Ford automobile, coming from the west and traveling in an easterly direction on Woodland Avenue, and was injured. Woodland Avenue and Thirty-sixth Street are 26 feet and 4 inches in width, from curb to curb, and are paved with asphalt.

R. H. Boldriek was riding with Mr. Brooks in the Hudson Super Six. Ed Berendt was driving the Ford automobile, without anyone in the car with him.

The defendant is engaged in the drug business at the northwest corner of Thirty-fifth Street and Ingersoll Avenue.

Plaintiff alleged that defendant was the owner of the Ford [622]*622automobile which struck her, and that the driver of the Ford automobile, Berendt, was, at the time of the accident, a servant of defendant’s, and that the injury resulted from the negligence of defendant, through such servant, in operating the automobile. The negligence alleged was in operating the automobile at a high and dangerous rate of speed, to' wit, about 30 miles per hour, and in not having the car under control at the point of the accident, and in not giving any warning of his approach, by sounding a horn or other signal as he approached said street crossing.

At the close of all the evidence, defendant moved for a directed verdict on many grounds, chief of which were that the evidence failed to show negligence on the part of the defendant which was the proximate cause of the accident; that the evidence failed to show that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence; that the evidence affirmatively showed that the plaintiff was guilty of some negligence on her part, contributing in some degree to the accident.

The motion was overruled. Defendant then requested eer7 tain instructions which were refused, and which will be later considered, with assignments of error. After verdict was returned and judgment entered thereon, defendant moved for a new trial on many grounds, which motion was overruled.

In considering the assigned errors, we will first take up appellant’s claim that it was error to submit the case to the jury, because, as defendant claims, there was no evidence to sustain the allegation that the automobile in qirestion was owned by appellant, or was being driven or operated by a servant or agent of appellant’s. This question was raised in several assignments, which may be discussed together. This point was not specifically raised, however, until in the motion for a new trial.

[623]*623[622]*622It was, of course, incumbent on the plaintiff to show that the defendant owned the automobile, and that the driver was the employee of the defendant, operating the machine in the scope of his employment, at the time of the accident in question, íhere was no direct testimony offered by plaintiff to show that defendant was the owner of the car, or that Berendt, who was driving the car, was doing so as the servant of defendant. Defendant contends that there was no evidence whatsoever tending [623]*623to show that defendant owned the Ford automobile, and-that there was no evidence tending to show that the driver of the automobile was the servant of the defendant, or that he was acting within the scope of the defendant’s employment -and in the course of defendant’s business, and that he was driving the ear with the consent of the defendant, as owner. The testimony which plaintiff claims proves that defendant was the owner of the car, and that Berendt was his servant, in driving the car, is the evidence of Dr. C..H. Read, and some items of testimony and circumstances shown in the evidence of other witnesses. Dr. C. H. Read, father of plaintiff testified that he saw defendant several times after the accident, in his store, and had conversation with him in reference to the accident, and that defendant said to him that he “realized that the boy was probably driving in a reckless manner; that he did not want to appear small in the matter, and referred me to the agency in the S. & L. Building.” Counsel for defendant objectéd to the question that called out this quoted statement, and afterwards moved to strike the statement, for the reason that it affirmatively appeared that the defendant was not at the scene of the accident, and had no personal knowledge about how the car was di'iven, and that the answer purports only to give the opinion and conclusion of defendant about that which he did not see. The answer was allowed to stand, the court remarking that it “is an assumption? that must have been based upon information procured from this man, or upon belief, at least. ’ ’ Permitting the question to be answered and the answer to stand are assigned as error; and we might here conveniently consider it. It is quite apparent that counsel for appellee was seeking to prove negligence, and not ownership of the car, nor that the driver was in the employ of the defendant. However, if the answer was competent for such purpose, it could properly be considered on any other issue that it tended to prove. ¥e think permitting the answer to stand as an admission against interest was not error. True, appellant did not see the accident, and had no knowledge gained by observation as to how the car was being driven by the boy. The driver, Berendt, was a boy 18 years of age. But we think the trial court did not err in ruling, in effect, that the statement [624]*624of defendant, if made, was ail assumption based on information or belief. If defendant afterwards discovered that bis information or belief was erroneous, because not based upon facts, then be could easily bave made explanation of his statement, if be bad made the statement. Defendant denied that be made any such statement; but it was for the jury to determine whether be did or not.

Defendant, G-us Reppert, testified that Dr. Read came into bis store, the third night after the accident, and that they bad a conversation.

“But in that conversation the conduct of the driver of the Ford was never mentioned. I never had any conversation with Dr. Read, at any time or at any place, with reference to the conduct of the driver of the Ford, or with reference to the kind of a driver that boy was. The driver was not mentioned in any conversation I bad with Dr. Read.”

Reppert further testified that Dr. Read came to his store the third night after the accident, and.that they talked about the condition of the girl.

“I told him I was very sorry. I called him once before, over the phone, and explained that I was sorry the accident had occurred. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
194 Iowa 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-reppert-iowa-1922.