Smithson v. Mommsen

276 N.W. 47, 224 Iowa 307
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1937
DocketNo. 44104.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 47 (Smithson v. Mommsen) 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
Smithson v. Mommsen, 276 N.W. 47, 224 Iowa 307 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.

A few miles south of the town of Miles in Clinton County, Iowa, is an intersection of two county trunk roads, one running east and west and the other north and south, thus intersect at right angles. As the north and south road approaches the intersection from the north, and some distance north from the intersection, there are two branches or “Y’s” making long sweeping curves to the east and west and intersecting the east and west road approximately two hundred feet *309 from the right-angle intersection mentioned, being designed to accommodate only such traffic on the north and south road as might be turning east or west on to the east and west highway or from the east and west highway turning north to reach the north and south road. Both of these spurs or “Y’s”, as well as the north and south and east and west roads were graded, much traveled, and were in good condition at the time of the accident. There were no stop signs at the right-angle intersection of the north and south and east and west roads. There were, however, stop signs erected where the east and west forks or “Y’s” entered the east and west highway. The record discloses that these signs were erected by WPA workers under the direction of the county engineer without the direction or approval of the board of supervisors of Clinton County, and that no official action of the board of supervisors was ever taken with ¡reference to the location of these signs or the designation as to which one of these two county roads should be preferred as to right of way over the other, under the provisions of sections 5079-dl and d2, which sections are as follows:

Sec. 5079-dl. “County trunk roads outside of cities and towns are hereby designated as arterial highways.”

Sec. 5079-d2. “The traffic on such arterial highways shall have the right of way over the traffic on any local county road intersecting therewith. At the intersection of said arterial highways, the county board of supervisors shall determine by the erection of signs, which traffic shall have the right of way.”

The two intersecting highways here involved were county trunk roads designated, by the above quoted section, as ‘ ‘ arterial highways”.

About 2:30 in the afternoon of June 19, 1936, one Otto Bruhn was driving his truck south on the north and south trunk road approaching the right-angle intersection heretofore referred to. The plaintiff, appellee, Smithson, was riding on the top of a load of rock in the box of the truck behind the cab. At the same time a Chevrolet coach owned by the defendant, appellant, Mommsen, and driven by his nineteen year old daughter, approached the same intersection from the east traveling in a westerly direction on the east and west road and coming from the left of the Bruhn truck. Both vehicles were traveling about twenty-five miles per hour and there was no obstruction *310 to the view of the driver of either vehicle for a distance of several hundred feet from the intersection. The testimony shows that Bruhn sounded the horn of his truck as he approached the intersection, once about three hundred feet and again one hundred feet before he reached the intersection. The driver of defendant’s car heard the horn of the truck and each driver saw the other vehicle about an equal distance from the intersection. Both vehicles continued to approach the intersection at about twenty-five miles per hour. The driver of the truck testified that he applied his brakes ten or fifteen feet from the point of collision and the driver of the defendant’s car stated, immediately after the accident, her brakes did not hold and her ear seemed to go faster when she endeavored to apply the brakes. The collision occurred in the center of the intersection. The front end of both vehicles coming in contact. The plaintiff was thrown, from his seat on the rock in the back end of the truck, about fifteen feet into a ditch and received serious injuries, among which was a fractured vertebra.

It appears that both Mommsen, appellant, and Bruhn, the owner and driver of the truck, were made defendants in this action, but that separate trials were ordered and this case proceeded only against the defendant, Mommsen, and resulted in a verdict and judgment against him, from which he appeals.

The first two errors assigned and relied upon by the appellant involve the correctness of the court’s instructions and especially instructions Nos. 8, 9, 10, 12, and 18. We will quote the instructions complained of.

Instruction No. 8. “By contributory negligence is meant an act or omission to act amounting to a want of ordinary care, or a failure to conform to the law on the part of a person seeking to recover damages for an injury, which occurring and cooperating with such an act or omission to act or failure to conform to the law on the part of the one from whom damages are prayed, became or constituted, in any way, manner, or degree, a cause of the former’s injury.”

Instruction No. 9. “It may be said that it appears without dispute in the evidence that a collision occurred as charged between a truck in which plaintiff was riding and an automobile owned by the defendant, John F. Mommsen, and being driven at the time by Jeanette Mommsen, and in the absence of evi *311 dence to the contrary it is presumed that it was being driven with his knowledge and consent. You are instructed that, under our law, the owner of a motor car, such as an automobile, is liable for the negligence of one who is driving the same with his knowledge and consent.

“It further appears, practically without dispute, that by reason of such collision plaintiff sustained injury or injuries, but this is not enough to warrant you in returning a verdict for the plaintiff. He must go further and show not only that the negligence of the driver of the Mommsen ear, in one or more respects substantially as charged, was the proximate cause of the aforesaid collision, but that he himself was free from contributory negligence in the matter, as before stated. He must also show the nature and extent of his injury or injuries.”

Instruction No. 10. “Negligence is the proximate cause of injury when it is the direct cause, the efficient cause, the one without which or in the absence of which the injuries to plaintiff would not have been sustained.”

Instruction No. 12. “It should be understood from what has been said that if the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries was the negligence of Bruhn rather than the negligence of the driver of defendant’s ear the plaintiff cannot recover from the latter. On the other hand, even if Bruhn is shown to have been guilty of negligence, plaintiff may still recover from the defendant if it appears that nevertheless if it had not been for negligence upon the part of the driver of defendant’s car also, substantially as charged, the plaintiff’s injuries would not have been sustained; and that no negligence on the part of plaintiff in any way, manner, or degree contributed to cause the same.”

Instruction No. 18. “You have been told that the plaintiff in order to be allowed to recover damages must show, among other things, that he was free from contributory negligence in the matter, and an explanation has been made of what is meant by contributory negligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 47, 224 Iowa 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smithson-v-mommsen-iowa-1937.