Sturgeon v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad

187 Iowa 645
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 25, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 187 Iowa 645 (Sturgeon v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad) 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
Sturgeon v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad, 187 Iowa 645 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. Plaintiff alleges that her automobile, which was being driven by her husband, was struck by one of defendant’s engines on a crossing in the city of Grinnell about November 11, 1916; that defendant was negligent in operating its said engine at a. dangerous rate of speed, and in excess of eight miles per hour, in violation of an ordinance of the city; in not having the bell continuously rung; in having no gates; in signaling plaintiff’s husband to cross; in not giving any warning signal, by bell or whistle; in failing to have the engine under control; in failing to stop the engine within a reasonable time and distance after it struck the automobile. The negligence is denied, and it [647]*647is claimed by defendant that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

Without discussing the alleged negligence of defendant, or the evidence in relation thereto, it may be conceded, for the purposes of the case, that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury as to some of the grounds alleged. Some complaint is made as to the rulings of the trial court on evidence; but the principal and decisive point in the case is whether the driver, plaintiff’s husband and agent, was guilty of contributory negligence. We think the trial court properly directed a verdict on this ground. Since the ruling was based on the sufficiency of the evidence to take the case to the jury, it will be necessary to refer to the evidence somewhat in detail, but we shall do so as briefly as may be. For convenience and brevity, we may refer to plaintiff’s husband, the driver, as plaintiff.

The collision occurred on Hamilton Avenue, which runs east and west. It is level, and 100 feet wide. It is paved, the paving being 31 feet 7 inches in width. It is 32 feet between the north curb of the paving and the sidewalk to the north. The sidewalk is 4 feet wide. The south end of the depot platform is about 10 feet north of the north edge of the sidewalk, and the south end of the depot is 27 feet north of the south end of the platform. There are 3 tracks west of the depot, running north and south, and 2 east of the depot; and in addition to this, the plat shows still another track, still further east. Each track is 4 feet 8% inches in width. It is about 21 feet between the extreme west track, where plaintiff was injured, and the next track west of the depot. Plaintiff says he heard a bell, and stopped east of the second track east of the depot. This was 115 feet east of the track where he was struck. There was a coach standing on the first track west of the depot, the south end of which was about even with the south end of the platform, or a little further south. There were no gates [648]*648at the crossing, and there was no flagman at the crossing, which fact was known to plaintiff. Plaintiff was familiar with the crossing. Plaintiff was driving west, and the engine, without cars, was going south. The accident happened on November 11, 1916, at 4:30 o’clock in the afternoon. Mr. Sturgeon and a man named Buswell were returning to Grinnell from the fair grounds south of town. It was a cold, misty day, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses; but they say that one could see all right. AH the curtains were on the automobile, but there was isinglass in the curtains. As plaintiff approached the intersection, he says he observed that his view to the north was obstructed by the depot and the coach, when he was 200 feet east of the track on which the coach was located. He knew there were a number of tracks there, but says he cannot say how many. He knew it was in the yards where they switch trains back and forth, and that there were various classes of trains moving across that street on the tracks. He had for two years crossed over the crossing repeatedly. As he approached, he saw á or 4 men working on the fifth track from the west, nailing down some boards on the crossing. When he got near the tracks and near the men, he stopped, because, ás he says, the men were working on the crossing. He supposed they were section men. When he stopped, he heard a bell ringing on an engine, and knew that there was an engine in the yard. When he stopped east of the track where the men were working, he said to Buswell that he guessed that engine was on the Montezuma train, due about 4:40 P. M., and was pulling up to the depot, and consequently paid no further attention to that engine, because he thought it was going north, until Mr. Buswell called his attention to the engine that struck him as they crossed onto the track. The men were nailing the planks at the north end, down on their knees. One of the section men says that he got up, and motioned to Sturgeon [649]*649to go south of where they were nailing, because they were extending the crossing, renewing the planks, and on the north side the plank was up; that plaintiff was driving a little bit to the north, when he motioned plaintiff to drive across the track to the south; and that plaintiff did drive over that crossing where- witness had indicated; that this was the only signal he gave. But plaintiff testifies that he took this signal to be a clear signal, and for him to cross; that he started up at 8 or 10 miles*an hour; and that his car would go 30 or 40 feet, at the rate he was going, before he could stop; that, after he started at 8i or 10 miles an hour, he made no effort to slow down or stop, until Buswell shouted, “Here’s an engine;” and that then he put his foot on the accelerator, for the purpose of beating the engine across; and that the car then shot ahead. Sturgeon says that, when Buswell shouted that, he looked up, and the engine was nearly against the auto; that, when Buswell spoke, it was just before plaintiff drove onto the track in front of the engine. Sturgeon says he was on the second track from the west, when he learned that there was an engine bearing down on him on the west track. The distance between the two west tracks is 11 feet and 6 inches. Sturgeon states in chief that, after he started across the tracks, he was paying attention to the crossing; but on cross-examination, he says that he paid no attention, and did not look to see whether or not the engine was coming, because he thought it was going the other way, and because of the signal; that the reason he drove across the tracks at 8 or 10 miles an hour, without stopping or paying any attention to approaching trains or engines, was because of this. He says he does not know whether he could see north past the coach after he came up near the track on which it stood, and he didn’t try to look. The engine struck the automobile about the middle. The auto was in good condition, was a left-hand drive, and weighed 4,200 pounds. [650]*650Plaintiff does not know how fast the engine "was going when it struck him. Mr. Buswell gave similar testimony: that he saw the locomotive, and thinks the front wheels of the automobile were then across the second track; that, when he first saw the locomotive, it was about 8 or 10 feet north of the paved crossing in the intersection, and the automobile was about 5 feet east of the track on which the engine was coming; that, when he shouted, the car shot ahead; it was just a jump, and the engine and the automobile collided, and it was all over then.

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Bluebook (online)
187 Iowa 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturgeon-v-minneapolis-st-louis-railroad-iowa-1919.