Trout v. Talerico

21 N.W.2d 672, 237 Iowa 285, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1946
DocketNo. 46803.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 672 (Trout v. Talerico) 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
Trout v. Talerico, 21 N.W.2d 672, 237 Iowa 285, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

*286 Hale, J.

This is an action brought by Mrs. Grace Trout against Victor Talericó, doing business as the. Tally-Ho Club, for injuries sustained by plaintiff in a collision with a waitress employed by defendant. Plaintiff, a resident of Omaha, was in the Tally-Ho Club on _ the evening of July 8, 1944. She collided with- a waitress, Mrs. Barkley, who was carry ing two cups of hot coffee. The coffee spilled on plaintiff’s forearm and on her leg, burning her. Plaintiff in her petition alleges negligence of the waitress and lack of contributory negligence on her part. Defendant denies the charges of negligence and alleges that plaintiff’s .injuries were due to her own contributory negligence. Defendant’s motion for directed verdict was overruled and verdict rendered in favor of plaintiff. Motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict was overruled.

There are two errors assigned: (1) that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motions and (2) that the court was in error in sustaining plaintiff’s objection to the admission of certain testimony of defendant offered on redirect examination.

The Tally-Ho Club is a restaurant owned and operated by defendant and located at 5601 Douglas Avenue, in Des Moines. The dining room is thirty-two feet north and south and thirty feet east and west. Guests enter the building through a door in the east wall north of the dining room, going into a hall, at the west end of which are rest rooms. Prom the hall they pass into the dining room by turning left through an archway about the middle of the north wall of the dining room. Inside the dining room, in its northeast corner, just east of the archway, is a coffee-making table where the waitresses obtain coffee to serve to the patrons. There are booths along the west, south, and east walls of the dining room and in each of the four corners is a circular booth. In the center part of the dining room are movable tables and chairs. There are three booths along the west wall of the dining room between the southwest and northwest circular booths.

On the evening in question plaintiff and her husband, *287 a serviceman borne on furlough, plaintiff’s fifteen-year-old daughter, Mr. Trout’s mother, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beck, a party of six, had been visiting at the home of a relative, Mr. Fred Lorenz, in' Des Moines. About 7 p. m. the six persons named went to the Ta’ly-Ho Club, arriving there about 7:10 p. m. They waited in the room north of the dining room until a table was available and then passed into the dining room, where they were seated at a table slightly to the west of the center of the room and approximately seven feet south and a little west of the archway in the north wall. Their table ran east and west and was made by putting two small square tables together. North of the table at which they were seated there were no tables but there was one small table to the east, so that there was a passageway seven feet wide north and south, extending from the coffee table past their table to the west side of the room. Mr. Beck sat at the east end of the table and Mrs. Beck at the west end. Plaintiff sat on the south side of the table next to Mr. Beck and her mother-in-law sat on the same side next to Mrs. Beck. Plaintiff’s husband sat on the north side immediately opposite plaintiff and at Mr. Beck’s right, with the daughter immediately west, facing Mrs. Catherine Trout. They were all engaged in conversation while eating, and plaintiff testified her husband arose and left the table. Before he returned and before she had finished her meal plaintiff got up +o go to the rest room. She testified that^hen she arose from ¿ne chair she stepped in an easterly direction around behind Mr. Beck’s chair and then walked north headed toward the archway; that after she passed Mr. Beck she saw the waitress approaching from the east carrying two cups of coffee in her left hand, and called to her; that the waitress was not looking ahead but was looking over her right shoulder and continued to do so. Plaintiff then backed up past Mr. Beck’s right arm and against the table. There was a great deal of noise and plaintiff did not think the waitress heard her call out. It all happened very swiftly and there was very little time to do anything, but plaintiff insists the waitress was not looking ahead. It seemed to plaintiff that Mrs. Barkley was six or seven feet away when plaintiff first saw *288 her. Thus the waitress was approaching plaintiff from the latter’s right side when she backed to the table. The waitress started to stop but dumped the coffee forward upon plaintiff. Plaintiff’s dress was soaked and her arm burned and her leg also burned but to a less degree. After the collision plaintiff immediately went to the rest room, where salve was applied to the burn, and thence to the home of Mr. Lorenz, and the next day, Sunday, returned to her home in Omaha. ■

Mrs. Barkley’s version of the accident is that she had been at the coffee table in the northeast corner of the room and was carrying the coffee and was wálking west; that she saw Mrs. Trout standing on the north side of the table and that she herself was walking in about the center of the open space north of the table at which plaintiff’s party was seated, and that as she got to a point opposite the table Mrs. Trout whirled and bumped into her and that plaintiff did not look around before she turned.

Mrs. Robert Carson, witness for defendant, who was waiting in the hall immediately north of the archway and looking into the dining room, testified also that she saw plaintiff at the north side of the table facing south and that she suddenly turned to the right as the waitress came from the east and hit the waitress with her elbow. To the same effect was the testimony of Mrs. Howard Stolp, seated in one of the booths o?i the west side of the dining room; C. M. Reppert, in a booth on the west side; Joe and Doris Phillippson, also in one of the west booths; and Floyd C. and Mrs. Irene Taylor.

I. The testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses is in most respects directly opposed to that of witnesses for defendant, plaintiff’s evidence showing negligence on the part of defendant’s employee, while the testimony of witnesses for defendant is to the effect that the collision was the fault of plaintiff, either in not observing or failing to pay any heed to the approach of the waitress. Thus there is a direct conflict in the testimony. Where there is such, under our many holdings the rule is so well established that authority need *289 not be stated therefor, the question becomes one for the jury to determine.

Defendant argues that under the most favorable evidence in this case plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. We do not so find. Under the evidence introduced by plaintiff it was shown that the waitress was within a very close distance at the time she was discovered by plaintiff.

Defendant argues that plaintiff voluntarily placed herself in a position of danger which could be seen and appreciated and is therefore guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We do not agree with this theory. The evidence fails to show that until immediately before, and almost at the time the collision occurred, there was anything which would tend to warn or charge plaintiff with any knowledge of impending danger.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 672, 237 Iowa 285, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trout-v-talerico-iowa-1946.