Smith v. Town of Hudson

207 N.W. 340, 202 Iowa 300
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 340 (Smith v. Town of Hudson) 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
Smith v. Town of Hudson, 207 N.W. 340, 202 Iowa 300 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Morling, J.

Three questions are argued: 1. Whether there was sufficient evidence of defendant’s negligenee. 2. WTiether the plaintiff was, as matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence. 3. Failure to instruct on the law of the road.

*301 *300 I. The sufficiency of the evidence of defendant’s negligence to go to the jury is not seriously argued. The accident occurred about 9 o’clock, Sunday evening, October 29, 1922. About two *301 days before, a ditcb for a water-pipe connection had been dug from the west side to the center of Main Street in defendant town about the middle of the block between Third and Fourth Streets; Main Street running north and south, and Third and Fourth, east and west. The ditch was-9 feet deep. The dirt was thrown out on either side, 2VS to 3 feet high, the full length of the excavation. There was no barricade. A red lantern was put in position about dusk Saturday evening, and burned until 8 o ’clock Sunday morning, when it was turned out. A witness for defendant testified that he put oil in the lantern Saturday evening until he thought it was full. “A lantern of the character that I used, on this excavation would usually burn two nights.. ’ ’ He says he lighted the lantern on Sunday evening about dusk, and that it was burning when he left it. There was evidence (denied by him) that he said to plaintiff, “Don’t blame me for getting hurt because the wick wasn’t long enough.” A witness for plaintiff testified that, at half past six Sunday evening, she didn’t notice the light. There was evidence that the lantern was not burning, and that there was no oil in it, at the time of the accident. There is no evidence that it was lighted at that time, and no claim that more than one lantern had been placed there. Defendant’s marshal and street commissioner for defendant testified to his locating the Y and measuring for the contractor to put in the ditch, and also to his seeing the lantern on Saturday evening. The question of negligence was for the jury. Garnetz v. City of Carroll, 136 Iowa 569; Fox v. City of Chelsea, 171 Mass. 297 (50 N. E. 622); Baker v.City of Grand Rapids, 111 Mich. 447 (69 N. W. 740).

II. Plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was riding on the front seat of a Ford touring car owned by her husband and being driven by her son-in-law on a family errand. Their starting point to go north on Main Street was about 2y2 blocks south of the excavation. They were traveling north at about 10 or 12 miles per hour. There was evidence that it was a bright moonlight night. There were street lights at the intersections south of the place of the accident, and one at the Fourth Street intersection. The street was not paved. It had been graded in the spring. There was evidence that it was not rough or rutty. One of defendant’s witnesses testified to driving his truck *302 around tbe end of tbe excavation, and to having no difficulty in driving over tbe street on tbe easterly half of it. Tbe son-in-law, Richards, testified:

“Tbe first I knew that tbe ditch was there was when I dropped into it * * * Tbe dirt was thrown out on both sides of tbe ditch. There was about two feet of dirt there; but it slanted out, just like that, so you could drive right over and drop in. That is all you bad to do. * * # I was traveling right in tbe center of the street, where the track was; and that was all the track there was, and there wasn’t any other place to drive but in the track. That street had been graded up, and nobody else traveled but just right in the center of the street. I was driving, looking right down the road. I didn’t see the ditch. I didn’t see the dirt thrown out on either side of this ditch, before I hit the pile on the south side. Mrs- Smith was looking right down north. * * * I wouldn’t know if it was moonlight or not, because I didn’t pay much attention to what the night was, — it wasn’t a very dark night.”

On cross-examination, he testified that the lights on the car were lighted, and the street lights burning. The braike was in working order, and he could stop within the length of the car,— about 12 feet. If that street light wasn’t burning, one could probably see an object 5 or 6 rods ahead.

“As long as that street light is burning there, you couldn’t see 14 feet ahead of you. * * * Q. Why didn’t you see this dirt pile and ditch, that you say could have been seen for 5 or 6 rods, by the headlights on your automobile? A. Because that street light blinded the headlights; and they would have blinded you, too, — you couldn’t see. Q. Then the reason you didn’t stop your car before you drove into the ditch was because the street light at the corner of Main and Fourth Street blinded your headlights, and blinded you? A. Yes, sir, because I couldn’t see the ditch. * * *”

On redirect examination, he testified that he meant that the street light was blinding him “to a certain extent, which the car lights wouldn’t show the roughness of the road.”

On recross-examination, asked what he meant by “certain extent, ’ ’ he answered:

“Well, that goes to show the street light wouldn’t give the headlights any chance to come up, to show any roughness of the *303 road. * * * The headlights didn’t show any object of the ditch. * * * It wasn’t the fault of the headlights; the headlights was burning all right. * * * I meant the street light shone against the headlights; that the street light blinded me to a certain extent, and keeping the headlights from showing the objects in the road. * * * from seeing the ditch, — that is what I mean.”

Plaintiff testified that Eichards was watching right down the street, and she was watching, too- “We were right in the traveled track. There was only one track on that street.” Didn’t see the ditch before she went into it.

“I was looking right around the side of the wind shield, as we came down the street, — looking north, in the direction our ear was going.”

On cross-examination, she testified that she knew the moon wasn’t shining; that, when they started on Main Street, they were driving on the right-hand side; that there were no automobiles or teams or travelers of any kind in the street, interfering in any way with their travel; that she was leaning out to the side because she generally rode that Way, “because I like to see what is going on;” that she could see through the wind shield, straight ahead.

“Q. What were you leaning out that way for, before the accident, as you drove down Main Street, Mrs. Smith? A. Well,, the street wasn’t very smooth, and I- don’t know,- — I was just kind'of watching along, so that we wouldn’t run into anything. * * * There was a street light right ahead of us, and when I looked through the wind shield with my glasses on, it glared so I couldn’t see. * * * Q. That was what kind of a street light,- — • are light? A. Yes, sir, I guess that is what you would call it,— one that hangs down, over the intersection of the street. Q. That was so bright that the glare, as you looked through the wind shield, looking down the street, bothered your vision some, so that you leaned out, to look out past the wind shield? * * * A.

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Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 340, 202 Iowa 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-town-of-hudson-iowa-1926.