Reimer v. Musel

264 N.W. 47, 220 Iowa 1095
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 42941.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 47 (Reimer v. Musel) 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
Reimer v. Musel, 264 N.W. 47, 220 Iowa 1095 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Richards, J.

This is an action at law brought by plaintiff-administrator to recover damages on account of the death of his decedent. Plaintiff claims that his decedent lost his life in an automobile collision caused by defendant’s negligence. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the court sustained defendant’s motion for direeted'verdict on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence, and directed a verdict for defendant and entered judgment thereon. Plaintiff filed motion for a new trial, which was overruled. From the judgment and rulings, plaintiff has appealed.

This appeal is from the second trial of the case. Upon the first trial there was a judgment for plaintiff from which defendant appealed to this court and there was a reversal. The opinion upon that appeal is found at 217 Iowa 377, 251 N, W. 863, 865. Upon the first trial the only specification of negligence, *1096 submitted to the jury, was defendant’s alleged faillire to yield to plaintiff’s decedent one-balf of the traveled part of the highway. Likewise, on the second trial, the same specification of negligence, and none other, was relied on by plaintiff. In the first trial defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict, setting up, among other grounds, that plaintiff had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence any negligence on the part of defendant and that any negligence on the part of the defendant, if there was any, was the proximate cause of the accident. This was the only ground considered in the former opinion and the holding was that on this ground the motion for directed verdict should have been sustained. On the appeal before us, this same ground is one of those relied on by defendant in support of the directed verdict and judgment. We will proceed to consider such ground of defendant’s motion for directed verdict, and whether, as claimed by plaintiff, the court erred in sustaining the motion on that ground.

The holding on the first appeal, of the insufficiency of the evidence to present a jury question on the issue of defendant’s negligence, becomes the law of the case and necessarily controls a retrial on the same evidence. Disalvo v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 203 Iowa 974, 213 N. W. 569. But if upon a retrial, after reversal, plaintiff has produced other or different evidence bearing on this question, which may be sufficient to carry the question to a jury, then on this second appeal the holding in the prior opinion of the insufficiency of the evidence is not conclusive. Eclipse Lumber Co. v. Davis, 201 Iowa 1283, 1284, 207 N. W. 238. Thus the necessity arises for a comparison of the evidence, upon which the prior opinion was based, with that introduced upon the second trial. While in a large measure the evidence upon the second trial was substantially the same as upon the first trial, plaintiff claims there was such additional evidence offered on the second trial that the question of defendant’s negligence became a jury question.

One such matter of additional evidence pointed out by plaintiff is testimony that on the next morning after the accident there was observed a cut or furrow on the north shoulder of the paving, in direct or continuous line with and extending from the black mark on the paving, discussed in the prior opinion, to the east curb of the flume. We think this adds nothing of new substance to the. evidence on which this court rendered its prior *1097 opinion, for it will be noticed that in that opinion the court refers to the testimony that there was a black mark on the paving, beginning twenty feet east of the flume with its general direction off the pavement onto the shoulder toward the flume, and the opinion states that the mark ended at the east side of the concrete flume. Evidently in the first opinion the court accepted the testimony as establishing that the mark extended for twenty feet to the east side of the flume, and the testimony on the second trial that a cut or furrow was observed where the first opinion describes the location of the mark is merely cumulative.

There was new evidence on the second trial that on the next morning after the collision two fresh cuts were observed in the west curb of the flume, in direct line with a projection towards the west of the marks we have just referred to. In the prior opinion it was held that the evidence of the black mark on the paving extending to the east curb of the flume did not prove the location of the cars at the time of the accident. In the second trial the new evidence as to the marks on the west curb of the flume, in line with the black mark extended or projected, changes the fact situation only by tending* to show that whatever car made the marks described and considered in the former opinion may have continued its course across the flume so as to make the marks on the west curb. It is true this additional evidence tends to bring the west end of the marks closer to the place where the Reimer car came to rest after the accident, to the extent of the distance across the flume. The former opinion described the distance from the end of the marks to the Reimer car as being sixteen feet. The evidence of the marks on the west curb on the second trial would tend to shorten this distance to six or eight feet as estimated by the witnesses. The question is whether this shortening* of the possible distance between the end of the marks and the Reimer car materially changes the present fact situation from that on the first appeal, based on which it was said in the prior opinion that we could not see where the marks proved the location of the cars at the time of the collision. A careful reading of the former opinion compels a negative answer. The law of this case on this appeal is as it was announced in the prior opinion, wherein it is stated in substance that verdicts should not be based on mere theory or supposition, and negligence cannot be predicated upon presumption or inference from the facts that were shown, and that it was the *1098 duty of the plaintiff to prove the cause of the accident, and to prove that the accident was due to the negligence of the defendant. It is apparent from the prior opinion that in applying these propositions of law to the evidence then in the record, the court reached its conclusion that the marks did not prove the location of the cars at the time of the collision, through consideration of matters in the evidence more fundamental than the question of the number of feet of distance between'the ends of the marks and the Reimer car. These more fundamental considerations, found expressed in.the former opinion, had to do with the lack of evidence connecting the marks with either the Reimer or the Musel car, the remoteness of the time of the seeing of the marks by the witnesses after the accident, the lack of evidence that the marks were not existent before the collision, the opportunity for the marks being made by other ears on this heavily traveled road including the Chekal car, and other matters set out in the opinion. It seems to us that these basic matters, in consideration of which the court in the first opinion applied the propositions of law above mentioned, appear in the evidence substantially on the second trial as they appeared on the first appeal, and the question of the distance between the ends of the marks and the Reimer car, standing at right angles to the direction of the marks, is comparatively incidental to the whole fact situation on which the former opinion was grounded.

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 47, 220 Iowa 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reimer-v-musel-iowa-1935.