Spooner v. Wisecup

288 N.W. 894, 227 Iowa 768
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
DocketNo. 44883.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 894 (Spooner v. Wisecup) 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
Spooner v. Wisecup, 288 N.W. 894, 227 Iowa 768 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

United States highway No. 75 runs in a north and south direction at tbe place of tbe accident. It has been paved since 1928 and is tbe main highway to Sioux City. It extends on a straight and level line for a half mile to tbe north and for a mile to the south the view is unobstructed. It is 68 feet wide and on the middle line thereof was a paved slab 18 feet in width. From the pavement a driveway extends west into the barnyard. About 30 feet south of this, on the opposite or east side of the pavement, was another driveway extending east from the pavement into the house yard.

At chore time on the evening of December 2, 1937, as Irving E. Spooner, the man who farmed these two places, was walking across U. S. highway No. 75 from his barnyard on the west toward his house yard on the east side thereof, he was struck by an automobile driven by Jacob A. Wisecup and owned by his father, Aaron Wisecup, receiving injuries from which he died shortly thereafter. His administrators commenced this action to recover damages. The petition recites seven grounds of negligence, and in a separate paragraph they also seek to recover on the theory of the last clear chance. The defenses pleaded were a general denial and the affirmative plea of contributory negligence. At the close of the evidence the defendants made a motion for a directed verdict and also *770 a separate motion to withdraw the seven grounds of negligence alleged from the consideration of the jury. The lower court overruled the motion to direct, but sustained the motion to withdraw the seven grounds of negligence and submitted the case to the jury on the theory of the last clear chance. The jury returned a verdict for the defendants and the administrators of the Spooner estate have appealed.

The appellants argue strenuously that the court erred in giving instruction No. 7 which is as follows:

“7. In this case you are instructed that the undisputed evidence herein shows that the said Irving E. Spooner at the time and place in question was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Such fact will prevent his recovery in this case, unless the plaintiffs have shown by the preponderance or greater weight of the evidence in this case, that they are entitled to recover under what is known, as the doctrine of the last clear chance, the essentials of which doctrine are set out in Instruction No. 4 and concerning which you will now be more fully instructed.”

The record shows that the decedent lived on this farm for better than 14 years, that daily he had crossed from the east side, where his house was located, to the west side where the barns were. That he was familiar with the crossing is conceded. That the view was unobstructed to the north for better than half a mile, a perfectly level stretch of pavement, and to the south for better than a mile. It is 25 feet from the west gate, through which Mr. Spooner passed to the edge of the pavement, and the collision occurred in approximately the center of the paved slab or 9 feet from the west edge. In other words he traveled 34 feet from the west gate to the place of the accident. There is some dispute in the record as to the exact location of the Wisecup car at the time Mr. Spooner passed through the west gate, but the most favorable to appellant’s side is a quarter of a mile to the north. Mr. Spooner was a man of 66 years of age, but according to the testimony “walked pretty fast with an elastic step”.

He walked through the west gate to the center of the pavement where he was injured by the appellee’s car coming from the north. There is no evidence that at anjr time Mr. *771 Spooner looked to the north or to the south. Under the undisputed evidence, although it was a clear day and still light, with an unobstructed view for the entire distance that he walked from the west gate to the place of the accident, no one says that he looked to the north to see if there was an approaching auto upon this main highway.

It is the claim of the appellants however that there were no eyewitnesses and, there being no eyewitness as to whether or not he looked, there is the inference that he looked from the natural instinct of self-preservation.

So we must examine the record to ascertain whether there were any eyewitnesses to this tragedy.

One of the appellant’s witnesses, Chauncey Adams by name, testified that he was working for Spooner, and that at about twenty minutes after five on the day of the accident he was coming on the highway from the south toward the Spooner place with a load of corn; that it was just getting dusk but persons and objects were visible at a considerable distance. When he was about 100 yards to the south, he saw Irving Spooner coming out of the barnyard gate on the west side of the highway and continued to watch him up until the time he was hit. Mr. Adams testified that he saw appellee’s car coming from the north for better than 1,200 feet; that his view was clear. He then described in detail, that Mr. Spooner took six or seven steps to the pavement, that he walked rapidly “with an elastic step,” that Mr. Spooner took four steps on the pavement and then seemed to leap in the air; that he was hit by the right front lamp and fender of the Wisecup car, that the body was hurled into the air, and located the spot where it finally landed. Here is a witness for the appellants that testifies that he watched Mr. Spooner from the time he left the west gate to the very moment that the accident occurred. In detail he tells the story, of how fast he was walking, how many steps he took, that he leaped just as he was hit, of watching the body hurl through the air, and described the very spot where it landed. That at no time did this witness see Mr. Spooner look to the north.

The purpose of the no-eyewitness rule is to establish a rule of presumption where death has resulted under such circumstances that no one witnessed just what took place, and *772 the presumption does not apply where there is direct evidence of the decedent’s conduct.

In the ease of Golinvaux v. Burlington, C. R. & N. R. Co., 125 Iowa 652, 656, 101 N. W. 465, 467, this court said:

“The doctrine seems to be bottomed on the thought that, when there is or can be no evidence regarding one’s conduct in a place of danger, the instinct of self-preservation implanted in every human breast will raise an inference that he was not guilty of any negligence which contributed to or brought about the injury. But where there is direct evidence as to his conduct there is no room for this inference, for the reason that his conduct is to be judged from what he in fact did, rather than from cm inference as to what he might home done.”

In the case of Lindloff v. Duecker, 217 Iowa 326, 330, 251 N. W. 698, 700, this court said:

“Where there is evidence of what the decedent was doing prior and up to the time of the accident, the ‘no eyewitness’ rule does not apply. * * * The reason for the rule which has been frequently discussed by this court is absent, and therefore the rule itself does not apply.”

In Sanderson v. Chicago M. & St. P. R., 167 Iowa 90, 97, 103, 149 N.

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 894, 227 Iowa 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spooner-v-wisecup-iowa-1939.