State v. Miskell

73 N.W.2d 36, 247 Iowa 678, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 15, 1955
Docket48725
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 73 N.W.2d 36 (State v. Miskell) 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
State v. Miskell, 73 N.W.2d 36, 247 Iowa 678, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 518 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The information charged the accused with the crime of reckless driving “with liquor involved” for that on November 23, 1953, he “did unlawfully, willfully operate his motor vehicle in a reckless manner with liquor involved * * * contrary to section 321.283 of the 1950 Code of Iowa.” (Italics ours.-) On motion of defendant the italicized words Avere stricken by the court.

The crime with which defendant is charged is found in section 321.283 of the Code of Iowa, 19'50,-to wit: “Reckless driving. Any person who drives any vehicle in such manner as to indicate either a willful or a Avanton disregard for the safety of persons or property is guilty of reckless driving.”

On the date stated, at about noon, as a prospective buyer, defendant Avas permitted by an automobile dealer in McCallsburg, Iowa, to take a used car that had been reconditioned, for a test driye of an hour or so. Later that afternoon Mrs. Roy Van Zee, a farmer’s wife living a short distance east of McCallsburg, Avas proceeding eastward on an east-west road in her car Avith *681 her two children for a four o’clock dental appointment in the town of Zearing, Iowa. The highway was a gravel two-lane road. She was traveling at a speed which she estimated as about fifty miles an hour. She had been driving a car for about nineteen years. When she was about 250 or 300 feet from a north-south intersecting road she observed a car about to pass her although she had heard no horn. This car passed her and cut into her lane about five or ten feet in front of her ear, “and the wheels of the car were off the ground.” She was startled. She estimated the passing ear was exceeding the speed of her car by fifteen miles an hour, and when it was about 100 feet in front of her it started to roll over. Mrs. Van Zee testified that the car rolled over three times — the first being before it reached the intersection. When the ear reached the south side of the road the driver evidently cramped'his wheels, and it turned sideways and started to turn over. It hit a highway sign. There was loose, moist gravel on the north side of the road but the witness did not recall the condition of the south side of the road. She saw no holes or depression in the road nor in the intersection, and said the road was not a “washboardy” gravel road, but just an ordinary gravel x*oad, and safe to travel over at a speed of fifty miles an hour. She testified that as the car started to roll over “its doors started flying opexx and several beer caxxs fell out axxd a gun.” She put on her brakes but not hard enough to slide the wheels. The passing car came to rest on the south side of the road, on the east side of the intersection. She stopped her car and walked up to the other car, which was about 100 or 150 feet east of the intersection. She saw the caxis of beer along the road and about the car. The driver of the car was still in his car but she did not speak to him. Mrs. Van Zee was a witness for the State.

Mert Coover, the car dealer, was a witness for the State. He testified that: the defendant came into his place of business about 12:15 p.m. on the 23d of November, 1953, and asked him if he could take out a 1951 Super 88 Oldsmobile to. show it to someone who might help him purchase it. The witness told him to have it back by one o’clock that afternoon. “It was thexx in good mechaxiical condition with the exception of the generator. He never brought it back and when it was towed in it was completely demolished.”

*682 A Mr. Goodmamson, of Roland, Iowa, a witness for the State, a trucker for the Marshall Canning Company, about four o’clock in the afternoon of November 23d was driving an empty truck west on the gravel road between McCallsburg and Zearing. When he was about eighty rods east of the intersection we have referred to, he “counted a. car being up in the air about three times.” He did not see it before it started to turn over, but he saw the dust that it made. He stopped to give assistance and found Miskell in the car unconscious. The car was on the south shoulder of the road. There was some loose gravel and also a bump in the road at that point. He said it was never a good road until they later fixed it. It was his judgment that the skid marks started east of the intersection. The car went end over end three times and landed on all four wheels. It was badly demolished. He saw four or five cans of beer and picked them up and threw them in the ditch. He did not see any skid marks across the intersection. The car turned over three times east of the intersection on the south side of the road. He stated that the car first started to turn over east of the intersection. There was loose gravel on the sides of the road. He located the place where the car first started to turn over by a dent in the road. There were washboard bumps in the intersection. “The road was maintained and it was not a hazardous road.”

Dale Allen, an automobile mechanic, who had worked for Mr. Goover, the auto dealer, since 1946, as a witness for the State testified he was familiar with the mechanical condition of the Oldsmobile which the defendant drove on November 23, 1953. He had repaired it and road tested it, the second time being just the morning before defendant took it out, and the car was in good condition except for the generator. The steering apparatus and brakes were in good condition at the time Miskell drove it.

Dr. Charles L. Hall, an osteopathic physician at Zearing, testifying for the State, said that he was called to the scene of the Miskell accident and gave him a preliminary physical examination, and he saw him later in the hospital. He testified to the location of the accident, but gave no other testimony.

William Severin, a highway patrolman, whose district included Story County, was a witness for the State. He investí *683 gated the accident about 4:10 p.m., after the defendant had been taken to the hospital. He testified that he first observed the tire marks of Miskell’s ear 300 feet west of the intersection in some gravel that had been piled on the north side of the road. He followed these tire marks and the marks of the car where it rolled over — leaving green paint marks on the gravel — to where the car was standing approximately 265 feet east of the intersection. A road signpost was broken off on the south side of the road. The witness saw the defendant at the hospital that evening and asked him for his driver’s license, and how fast he was going, and “he (Miskell) said he was going about 35 to 40 miles per hour.”

At the close of the State’s evidence, defendant made the following motions to strike: 1. All words concerning liquor in the Information; 2. to eliminate all such words from any charge to the jury, and to instruct the jury to totally disregard the same; 3. to strike from the testimony of Mrs. Van Zee what she stated about seeing beer cans fly out of the defendant’s car; 4. all testimony of Goodmanson about seeing and picking up beer cans on the highway or in the ditch; 5. to strike from the testimony of Severin, the highway patrolman, all statements of his conversation with defendant at the hospital, as being violative of Code sections 321.266 et seq. and 321.271; and 6. to direct a verdict for defendant because of insufficient evidence to sustain the charge in the Information.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.W.2d 36, 247 Iowa 678, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miskell-iowa-1955.