Rogers v. Interurban Railway Co.

150 Iowa 270
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 Iowa 270 (Rogers v. Interurban Railway Co.) 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
Rogers v. Interurban Railway Co., 150 Iowa 270 (iowa 1911).

Opinion

Evans, J.

Tbe accident upon wbicb tbis action is based occurred on March 15, 1909, at or near a highway [271]*271crossing over the defendant’s railway a short distance south' of the town of Woodward. At this point the railroad runs north and south and the highway east and west. The roadbed at this point is laid upon an embankment, and. the highway is carried over it by a corresponding grade. The plaintiff was driving west in daylight on a cold day with a team of horses and single-seated buggy, the top of which was up and the side curtains on. The plaintiff’s cap was drawn down and the collar of his fur coat was drawn up over his ears. At a distance of fifty or seventy-five feet east of the track he saw a car approaching from' the south on the railroad track. He stopped his horses and got out of the buggy on the right-hand side, intending at that time to go to their bits. When the motorman saw his approach he sounded an alarm by way of sharp “toots” of the whistle. This excited the plaintiff’s horses, as he claims'. The car stopped south of the crossing, and the plaintiff drove to the west side. At a point thirty or forty feet west of the crossing he lost control of them, and they escaped, whereby one of the horses was injured and the harness and buggy were damaged. The ground of alleged liability of the defendant is charged by the plaintiff in his petition as follows:

That on or about the 15th day of March, 1909, plaintiff was driving westward with a team and buggy on said highway, and in a careful and prudent manner approached the said crossing of the said railway company. That as he came close thereto a car being operated on the defendant railway company’s track, without warning to this plaintiff, approached from the south, and when the plaintiff was about seventy-five feet distant from the track of the said railway company, the said car appeared in sight a short distance from the said team, running at a high and dangerous rate of speed. That, when the said car vims distant about fifty feet from the plaintiff and his said .team, the motorman thereon, well knowing that plaintiff’s team had become frightened' and that the plaintiff was endeavoring to control them, did then and there negligently and wrongfully sound the whistle on the said car in a loud [272]*272manner, further frightening the said team of this plaintiff, and causing the said team to break away from this plaintiff, and destroy his buggy and harness. . . . That the said defendant was negligent, in that the servants of the said defendant company operating the said car at the time of the occurrence of the matters herein alleged did not give the proper signals or warning to this plaintiff of the approach of their said car, and gave no warning of the approach of said car, and the said servants of the said railway company ran and operated the said car at a dangerously high rate of speed, and that the servants of the said company were negligent in the operation of the said car by reason of the loud sounding of the whistle on the said car when near plaintiff’s team, and with knowledge of the dangers and peril in which the said plaintiff and his said team were placed, and that by reason of the negligent acts herein referred to the said team became frightened, and plaintiff suffered the injury herein alleged, resulting in his damage in the sum of $250.

The circumstances leading up to the accident are described by plaintiff in his testimony as follows:

This road on the highway where it crosses the Interurban is graded up. Back east from the track, probably about one hundred feet, they start,a narrow grade from there up to the top of the track. It is the same west of the track. On the day of this accident I was driving west, and my 'team had reached a point about fifty feet from the track when I first saw the car approaching. The car came from the south. I did' not hear any whistle blown or bell rung, or other warning of the approach of the car. There was no bell rung or whistle blown on this car as it approached at any time. I first observed the trolley on the car. I reined in my horses, and got out of my buggy. I was about fifty feet from the track. I got out to go forward to get to my horses by the head. At that time the horses were restless. The car having come into sight, the team moved .ahead and to one side and back again as a team would that was frightened. I next heard several short blasts of the whistle, and the team bolted ahead. At the time the' whistle was blown, I was on the ground and the car [273]*273■was between fifty and one hundred feet away. When the whistle was blown, I was in plain view of the car and the motorman. When I got out, the team would hardly stop. I got out on the side, and just as I started to go to the horses’ heads the whistle blew, and the team plunged forward, dancing back and forth, and, as I started, they started forward faster than I could go. I still had the lines. The team went across the track and broke away from me on the downgrade on the other side. They crossed the track ahead of the car. After the team broke away from. me, I looked around when I was probably thirty or forty feet west of the track, and the car was just coming to a stop on the highway, but not quite to the wagon road that crosses the railway tracks. At the time the team took fright there were six short' blasts of the whistle. It was a sharp, shrill whistle. The team was unmanageable when they crossed the tracks.' They received their scare at the time the whistle .was blown. They were probably forty feet east of the track when this whistle was blown. They received their scare at that point. . . . The distance from where this car emerged from the cut before it stopped was about one hundred and fifty feet. From the time I saw the body of the car it was probably two hundred to three hundred feet, and from the time I sáw the body of the car emerging from the cut it was about one hundred and fifty feet to where it stopped. I was about fifty feet from the crossing when I discovered the trolley emerging from the cut. I jumped out of the buggy on the right side. This would be the side of the buggy away from the ear. I got out between the wheels, and started forward to get the horses by the bits. It was a cold day. The roads were pretty rough. I have been familar with that crossing for a long while, and with the cuts there and with the grades and embankment at that point. ... As you emerge from the cut going north, it becomes shallower. Standing fifty feet from the track before you could see the car, it would be about one hundred feet from the crossing. When I first stuck my head out of the curtain to look, I was about a couple of hundred feet back from the crossing. I kept my head out looking back and forth north and soiith until I saw the ear. When I saw the car, I jumped out. I do not remember in which [274]*274hand I held the reins. I had my gloves on. I thought I could control my team better by jumping out and getting hold of the bits. I did not attempt to control them by remaining seated in the buggy. The team I was driving was hard to frighten. I never had any trouble about one of them running’ away. Neither of these horses at the time of this accident had shown any indication that they were frightened. When I saw the trolley of the approaching car, I thought if I drove ahead I would meet the train on the track. I did not want to take the chances of being ditched there. I did not see the motorman.. I did not see him give any signal to me. ... I retained my hold of the lines while the team was going fifty feet from where I got out to the track and still held the lines after they got over the track for a short distance. I kept my feet also.

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Related

Landis v. Inter-Urban Railway Co.
166 Iowa 20 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1914)

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150 Iowa 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-interurban-railway-co-iowa-1911.