Sparks v. Long

11 N.W.2d 716, 234 Iowa 21
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 46310.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 716 (Sparks v. Long) 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
Sparks v. Long, 11 N.W.2d 716, 234 Iowa 21 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Mulroney, C. J.

On Sunday evening, June 29, 1941, plaintiff was a visitor at the Decatur County Hospital in the vicinity of the north city limits of Leon, Iowa. She left the hospital about 8:30 p. m.,'when it was dark, and walked down a diagonal sidewalk leading to the comer of highway 69, a paved road running north and south on the west side of the hospital grounds, and a gravel road running east and west on the south side of the hospital. This intersection is a T-interseetion with the gravel road running east, but not west, of the paved highway. When plaintiff reached the northeast corner of the intersection she walked south to about the middle of the gravel road on the east side of the paved highway. She then turned west, and, after waiting until some northbound cars passed, she started across the pavement and was struck by defendant’s southbound automobile, sustaining a fractured pelvis and other injuries.

In her suit against defendant for damages for her injuries plaintiff alleged twelve grounds of negligence. The court submitted four, and, at defendant’s request, a special interrogatory inquiring whether defendant’s car had lights on. The jury answered the interrogatory in the affirmative and returned a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial upon twenty-five grounds which was sustained by the trial court “on all of the twenty-five grounds” and the verdict of the jury and the answer to the special interrogatory were set aside. It is from this action of the trial court that defendant appeals.

The twenty-five-ground motion for new trial contains many duplications and enumerates as grounds some complaints that are not found in the statute. Plaintiff calls our attention to *23 the broad discretionary powers of the trial court in granting a motion for new trial and cites many decisions of this court recognizing this rule. But the discretion which the trial court possesses is a legal discretion — one that must be exercised upon sound judicial reasoning. It is not unlimited. Eller v. Paul Revere Ins. Co., 230 Iowa 1255, 300 N. W. 535. The trial court may grant a new trial only upon the grounds stated in section 11550, Code of 1939. “Inferior courts have no authority to grant new trials except such as is given them by statutes.” 46 C. J. 60, section 2. The trial court’s ruling sustaining the motion for new trial amounts to a decision that a fair trial was not had. Upon this review we deem it our duty to scrutinize the record with great care to see if the court’s conclusion can reasonably be supported. Everyone is entitled to a fair trial of the issues he tenders to a court or jury, but due regard for our judicial system compels that he be accorded but one fair trial. Since the motion for new trial was sustained “on all of the twenty-five grounds” by the trial court, we will have to discuss them all, although we feel proper consideration will admit of some grouping of the grounds alleged in the motion.

I. Defendant argues that under the record his motion for directed verdict should have been sustained on the ground that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and this in itself negatives the right of plaintiff to a new trial. In grounds 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 17, 18, and 25 of the motion for new trial plaintiff alleged that the verdict of the jury was “not supported by the evidence ® # contrary to the evidence * * * contrary to the law * * * not the result of due deliberation * * * unfair, unjust, and wrong * * and the verdict does the “plaintiff an injury.” In the foregoing grounds plaintiff invokes the statutory ground “that the verdict * * * is not sustained by sufficient evidence, 'or is contrary to law.” Here, plaintiff invokes the sixth statutory ground for granting new tidal found in section 11550: “That the verdict " >:i is not sustained by sufficient evidence, or is contrary to law.”

We agree with the conclusion but not the premise of defendant’s argument. It is true that if defendant were entitled to a directed verdict on the ground of plaintiff’s contributory negligence, then plaintiff would have no right to a new trial. *24 But we cannot say, under this record, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter- of law. The plaintiff was a woman sixty-three years of age, and she testified that she waited on the east side of the paved highway somewhere near the center of the gravel road for three northbound cars on highway 69 to pass; that she intended to go to the sidewalk on the west side of highway 69 as there was no sidewalk on the east side; that it was dusk and the northbound cars had their lights on; and that after the northbound cars had got by her “possibly 50 feet” she started west across the paved highway. She further testified:

“Before I started across the street and while I was crossing it I looked both ways. There were no lights of any car from the north coming in my direction. There was no car coming from the north that gave any signal of the horn or in any other way. * * * I kept watching for a car from the north during all the time that I was attempting to cross the street. I could see the tail-light of the ear going north all of the time.”

Plaintiff’s testimony in her own behalf was the only testimony she introduced in the main case as to the occurrence of the accident. Her other witnesses testified as to her injuries and certain measurements, and one rebuttal witness testified about an admission allegedly made by defendant that he was driving approximately forty miles an hour at the time of the accident and that “he had seen the lady standing at the side of the road from the lights of an oncoming ear from another direction * * *.”

The defendant, a resident of Missouri, testified he was driving south on highway 69, with his wife in the front seat with him, and his mother, father, and seventeen-year-old son in the rear seat. He and his wife and father all testified that the lights on his car were burning. His mother did not attend the trial, and his son was asleep at the time of the accident. His testimony that the lights were on was corroborated by Richard Graham and Kenneth Craig, the driver and occupant of the last northbound ear that passed defendant just before the accident, and by Arthur Boswell, Avho was sitting in a parked car on the south side of the hospital. Roy Blakesley, who was in his yard near the *25 scene of the accident, testified tlia,t defendant’s lights were on immediately after the accident when plaintiff was lying on the pavement. The defendant further testified- he was going approximately twenty-five miles an hour at the time of the accident; that just as he passed the northbound string of cars he saw plaintiff “going diagonally across the highway with her head down, in either a trot or a long walk * * He testified she was within ten or twelve feet of his car when he first saw her and he immediately applied his brakes and pulled his car to the right but the woman came in contact with the outside edge of the left front fender outside the headlight; that he stopped within the length of the car plus ten or twelve feet and he and his father carried plaintiff to the hospital. His testimony is corroborated in its essential parts by Kenneth Craig, in the northbound car, who saw plaintiff on the east side of the pavement after they drove past the intersection, and Craig further testified:

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.W.2d 716, 234 Iowa 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-long-iowa-1943.