Stevenson v. Reimer

35 N.W.2d 764, 240 Iowa 652, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1949
DocketNo. 47345.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 N.W.2d 764 (Stevenson v. Reimer) 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
Stevenson v. Reimer, 35 N.W.2d 764, 240 Iowa 652, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Hale, J.

— The owners of the plane maintained an airport near Knoxville, and as part of their business rented airplanes to qualified persons. They allege that on June 5, 1947, they leased to the defendant an airplane in good condition, and while it was in his exclusive possession it was damaged and wrecked.

Defendant alleges in his answer that he applied to plaintiffs for an airplane to rent and was assigned the plane in question; that after he had started the airplane he discovered the runway was soft and muddy and that plaintiffs had permitted same to grow up in grass and weeds; that on account of the condition of the runway he was unable to attain sufficient speed to take off; that there were tall weeds at the end of the runway which obscured the fence and on account of that he did not discover said fence in time to avoid a collision; that said collision was not caused by any negligence on his part but *654 was caused by the negligence of the plaintiffs in failing to maintain the airport and runways in a proper and safe condition.

The airport operated by the plaintiffs is located on a forty-nine-acre tract with a north-south runway 200 feet wide and 2000 feet long, which is crossed about 600 feet north of the south end by an east-west runway 150 feet wide and 1100 feet long. The entire tract is surrounded by a fence with woven wire at the bottom and barbed wire at the top, with fence posts, some wood and some steel, about 4y2 feet tall and about 16 feet apart. The flying time was sold by what were called “blocks” entitling the purchaser to five hours flight time.

Accompanied by -a friend and Wallace, an employee of the plaintiffs, on the morning in question, June 5, 1947, in accordance with previous arrangement, defendant drove to the airport. The proprietors of the airport, plaintiffs, owned two airplanes— one a Luseombe, which was selected for the flight. The' field was soft. The north-south runway was- practically level. The east-west runway was lower at each end than in the middle where it crossed the other runway; the weeds and grass, according to the defendant, being higher at the west end of the east-west runway. According to the defendant’s testimony both runways were in use, but the wind being in the proper direction the defendant used the east-west runway, traveling from the east to the west. There were some tracks in the runway indicating that it had been used that morning.

Defendant first taxied to the east end and then turned around into the wind. He'states that when he crossed the north-south runway he was going at the approximate speed of forty miles an hour, not quite enough speed to be airborne. The plane reached a soft spot in the runway and that together with the weeds slowed him down. The weeds were between twenty-four and thirty inches high along the west end of the runway and obscured the fence at the end, and all that was visible were the barbed wires. He alleges that he could not stop because if he had put on his brakes they would have put the plane over on its back, and-he further alleges that he was too-close to the fence when he saw the wires to stop, and he attempted to go through the fence between the posts and break the wires, but *655 the plane caught in the woven wire which was concealed by the weeds and upset the plane; that there were no signs of any kind indicating there was a soft spot in the runway; that if any markers were on the west end of the runway they were obscured by the grass and weeds and could not be seen. These are the general facts as shown by the evidence.

On trial plaintiffs introduced evidence showing, in general, the leasing of the plane in good- condition to the defendant, and its return in a damaged condition, and the amount of damages. At the close of all the testimony defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict which was overruled by the court, and the jury was instructed and it returned a verdict for the- plaintiffs. Motion for new trial was overruled, and defendant appeals.

I. Defendant’s first assignment of error relates to the court sustaining plaintiffs’ motion to strike paragraph 7 of defendant’s answer and amendment thereto, and refusal to permit the introduction of testimony regarding an alleged contract between the parties. This paragraph 7 related to a conversation between the defendant and one of the plaintiffs prior to the purchase of flying time on the field, and was claimed to have occurred in November 3946, following which defendant purchased the block of time. The flight in question was attempted to be made in June 1947. Paragraph 7, as amended, is as follows:

“Further answering and for separate defense the defendant states, that sometime prior to the date in question this defendant had a conversation with the plaintiffs in regard to leasing airplanes and plaintiffs quoted to him a rate per hour which this defendant considered high and he asked for a lower rate per hour than plaintiffs were offering; that the plaintiffs at that time informed the defendant that they were carrying insurance which fully protected them and all of their lessees of planes from any and all damages whatsoever whether caused by their own negligence or by the negligence of the lessees of their planes and that by reason of this coverage they were paying a high rate for this insurance and could not afford to lease planes at a lower rate; that relying on these statements that the plaintiffs’ insurance would cover any accident that might occur to *656 this defendant irrespective of whether caused by negligence or otherwise this defendant did at various times including the time in question lease airplanes from the plaintiffs which he would not have done at that rate bad it not been for the plaintiffs assuring him that he was protected against loss or damages of every kind should he meet with accident irrespective of whether said accident, was caused by his negligence or otherwise.”

It seems to us that this issue should have been submitted. The jury had a right to consider this allegation of the defendant. If established by the evidence and the jury found that the defendant was so protected as alleged, and such was the understanding between the parties, it amounted to an inducement by the plaintiffs to the defendant and became a part of the contract of hire. An offer of evidence was made to that effect, objection to which was sustained. We know of no reason why evidence of the entire contract could not have been shown. The rulings of the court sustaining the motion to strike and the rejection of the offered testimony in relation thereto were erroneous.

II. Defendant’s second assigned error is that plaintiffs, having framed their petition on the theory that the relation of bailor and bailee existed between themselves and defendant, had the burden of proving negligence, and failed to meet the burden. The case was tried on the theory that a presumption was created by the delivery of the airplane in good condition to the defendant and its return in a damaged condition which, with nothing else, would create a presumption of liability on the part of the defendant, but when evidence was offered which tended to show that the injury to the plane was not due to the negligence of the defendant, it was then the duty of the plaintiffs to go forward with other testimony showing negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.W.2d 764, 240 Iowa 652, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-reimer-iowa-1949.