Stokes v. City of Sac City

130 N.W. 786, 151 Iowa 10
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 N.W. 786 (Stokes v. City of Sac City) 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
Stokes v. City of Sac City, 130 N.W. 786, 151 Iowa 10 (iowa 1911).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The plaintiff claims that while lawfully driving along one of the streets of the defendant city, and being in the exercise of due care on her own part, her horse became frightened by the sight and smell of a wild animal exhibition which defendant had negligently allowed upon said street, with the result that she was thrown from her carriage and severely injured. The defendant denies that it was in any manner negligent with respect to the matters complained of. The evidence tends to disclose facts as follows: It was circus day in Sac City. Following in the trail of the circus was the exhibition of an animal the nature of which is left in some doubt. Some witnesses speak of it as a wild hog, or wart hog, of extraordinary size, endowed with a heavy mane, a bushy tail, long tusks, a misshapen face, and a disagreeable odor. The fair in[12]*12ference seems to be that it was a freak specimen of tbe porcine family, whose more exact scientific classification is not a matter of importance. It was loaded in a van or cage mounted on wheels. On the morning of the day in question the showman in charge drove the van to a position on the street at or near the corner of Fifth and Main streets, where it remained through the day. The team which hauled it was detached, the tongue of the vehicle removed, and the cage so arranged that persons paying for the privilege could enter and view the exhibit. Early in the day the mayor of the city visited the showman and suggested the advisability of his obtaining a license, but he replied that the main circus had been duly licensed, and that in other towns this had been construed as including a permit for the side shows and collateral exhibitions which clustered about it. This “bluff” appears to .have satisfied the city’s executive, as he collected no license fee, and the faker continued to do business at the same stand. The plaintiff resided in the country, and on the morning in question she, with her three little girls, drove to town in a single-seated carriage drawn by one horse. She described the horse as twenty years o'ld, crippled, and quiet, one which she had often driven to town. In the' afternoon, being ready to return to her home, she entered her carriage; two of her children occupying the seat with her and the third sitting on the carriage floor at her feet. Starting homeward she turned the corner at Fifth avenue and Main street, where the exhibition was located, and at or near the turn (the exact point being in dispute) the horse appeared to take fright, and the woman, evidently more or less distracted by her anxiety for the safety of her brood of little ones, was unable to hold the animal in check, and after running some distance she was thrown out. With this general outline of conceded or undisputed facts, we now proceed to consider questions raised by the appeal.

[13]*13corporations.personal injury: evidence: erroneous exclusion: [12]*12I. Many of the trial court’s rulings upon evidence [13]*13are challenged by the appellant. It will be impracticable to deal specifically with them all, and we mention only those which seem to be of controlling importance. The question of fact over which , _ the parties seem to have most strenuously contended was whether the plaintiffs horse took fright at the exhibition at the corner of Fifth and Main streets. Concerning this and collateral questions very much of the evidence offered by the plaintiff was ruled out on the defendant’s objection to its competency and materiality. For example, the plaintiff testifying as a witness described the horse she was driving as being “crippled and quiet.” The statement that he was quiet was stricken out, as being the conclusion of the witness. Again, she said that as she drove around the corner by the show wagon the horse “noticed the wagon and shied and jumped.” The statement that “the horse noticed the wagon” was stricken for a similar reason. Again, she said the horse “took fright at the wagon,” and the words “at the wagon” were stricken. Another witness, after saying she saw the horse as it was running down the street, was asked whether plaintiff “acquired any control over it,” and objection to the question as calling for a eonclusion was sustained.

Still another witness who had been at or near the exhibition wagon on that day was asked whether he saw any horses “become frightened” at it, and an objection to the inquiry as incompetent and immaterial, unless it be confined to plaintiff’s horse, was sustained. The testimony of several other witnesses was offered,, to the effect that they saw and observed the wagon and its contents at its location already described on the day of plaintiff’s injury, and that several different teams being driven along the street in that vicinity became greatly frightened at the exhibition and were hSld under control with much difficulty. This offer was in each instance rejected, the court saying, “It [14]*14is the court’s theory that evidence of other horses being frightened is not competent.” These rulings can not be sustained. The quiet character or habit of the horse was a material fact bearing on the question whether plaintiff was in the exercise of due care in driving it, and the defendant’s objection thereto should have been overruled. Her statement that the horse noticed the wagon or took fright at the wagon was clearly admissible. While it partakes somewhat of conclusion, it is also a fact to which any intelligent observer may testify. The person driving the horse and observing its movements can speak with reasonable certainty of the fact of its fright, and ordinarily (with scarcely less certainty) of the cause. See Schmidt v. Dubuque, 136 Iowa, 402, and cases there cited.

It is argued by appellee that the error in this respect was waived by .the plaintiff. This claim is made in reliance upon matters occurring at the trial, as here stated. Following the plaintiff’s statement that “the horse noticed the wagon,” the record shows the following: “Mr. Ilelsell: I move to strike out from her answer ‘the horse noticed the wagon’ as being a conclusion of the witness; as to what he did she has a right to say. The Court: I suppose that is true; that may go out. Mr. Goldsmith: The words ‘the horse noticed the wagon’ may go out? The Court: That may be stricken out of the answer, and the rest may stand. (Plaintiff excepts.)” This, appellee insists, indicates an acquiescence in the ruling. We do not so construe it. The remark by plaintiff’s counsel seems to have been only by way of interrogatory to the court. This is indicated, not only by the interrogation point, but also by the fact that the court then repeats its ruling and plaintiff preserved an exception thereto. In any event, the error is repeated in so many rulings upon plaintiff’s quite persistent effort to get the matters of this kind in evidence that we think its prejudicial effect was in no manner neutralized.

It must further be said that the rule applied to plain[15]*15tiff’s case by the trial court seems to have been overlooked in the admission of testimony for the defense. Eor example, a witness who was present at the time of -the accident was permitted to state from his experience and from what he' saw of plaintiff’s horse at the tinre that it was not uncontrollable.

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130 N.W. 786, 151 Iowa 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-city-of-sac-city-iowa-1911.