Welch v. Greenberg

14 N.W.2d 266, 235 Iowa 159, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 2, 1944
DocketNo. 46406.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 N.W.2d 266 (Welch v. Greenberg) 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
Welch v. Greenberg, 14 N.W.2d 266, 235 Iowa 159, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 566 (iowa 1944).

Opinions

Hale, J.

Plaintiff brought suit against defendants to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of Hansina Fredericka Layland, his intestate, caused by a collision between the automobile in which she was riding and a truck. The automobile was owned by Dallas Davis and was being driven by George Layland, husband of deceased. The truck was owned by Sam Greenberg and Elmer Greenberg, doing business under the firm name of Greenberg Fruit Company, and was driven by Tona Sparano, their employee.

*161 Plaintiff alleges in Count I of his petition that decedent was a guest in the car which her husband was driving when it collided with the truck, that the driver of the truck was guilty of negligence, and that plaintiff’s decedent was free from any contributory negligence. The grounds of negligence include failure to keep on the right-hand side of the pavement, failure to yield one half of the traveled way, excessive speed, failure to drive at a careful and prudent speed, failure to reduce speed, a greater speed than permitted the driver to bring the truck to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead, failure to keep the truck under proper control, failure to keep a lookout, and driving the truck into the automobile on the left side of the highway. In Count II of the petition plaintiff relies upon the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur for the purpose of establishing his claim. . Defendants filed a general denial alleging plaintiff’s damage was caused solely by the negligence of intestate’s husband as operator of the car in which she was riding and contributory negligence of plaintiff’s intestate.

On August 27, 1941, George Layland, his wife, Mrs. Dallas Davis, and Helen Davis, infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Davis, left Audubon to go to Unionville, Iowa, to attend the funeral of Mrs. Thomas Davis, a sister-in-law of Dallas Davis and niece-in-law of George Layland. Dallas Davis had gone to Unionville earlier in the day and finding his sister-in-law dead had authorized his uncle, George Layland, to use his car to bring the other members of the family to Union-ville. The party left Audubon about 9 o’clock in the evening, with George Layland driving the Davis car, a 1931-model Chevrolet. They traveled on Highway 71 to Highwáy 64, thence east on Highway 64 to Des Moines, and south on Highway 60 through Pleasantville. Upon leaving Pleasantville George Layland was driving, with his wife on the front seat beside him. Mrs. Davis, who was sitting in the back seat with her six-months-old baby, went to sleep about the time they left Pleasantville and so did not see the collision. There is no evidence tha! the car slopped between Pleasantville and the scene of the collision.

About two miles south of Pleasantville Highway 60 reaches Highway 92. It there forms a Y, the west arm of which curves *162 to the southwest and runs into Highway 92. The" east arm of the Y is considerably longer, curving to the southeast and joining Highway 92 at the east end of such curve. The two highways then proceed east as one road, and up a hill of considerable size, and on to Knoxville, where Highway 60 turns off to the south and east through Marion, Monroe, and Appanoose counties. Unionville, which was the destination of the occupants of the car, is in Appanoose county. From the point in the Y where Highway 60 starts to curve to the southeast there is an extension of the road running straight south, cutting Highway 92 almost at right angles, but this extension, from the point where it leaves Highway 60 to the intersection with Highway 92, is' not paved but is blacktop. The concrete paving on Highways 60 and 92 is eighteen feet wide. At the point where the two highways join at the east end of the southeast arm of the Y the pavement is about forty feet wide, the four extra feet being on the north side. On Highway 60, a short distance after turning into the southeast arm of the Y from the north there is a “Slow” sign on the right side of the pavement.Several hundred feet farther to the southeast, and about fifty feet from where Highways 60 and 92 unite at the east end of the .curve, there is a “Stop” sign on the right side of the pavement. On the north side of the curve is an oil station. Sixty to seventy-five feet east of the intersection of the two highways is a flume on the south side of the pavement, marked by guardposts running east and west. The roads slope from east, west, and northwest down to this flume, the east slope .being longer and steeper than the slope from the northwest, but in the immediate vicinity of the flume it is comparatively level. The south shoulder of Highway 92, from the west end of the flume to and beyond the intersection with the blacktop extension, slopes to the south, the highway being higher than the adjacent land.

While the Chevrolet car was coming from the northwest down the curve of Highway 60 into Highway 92, Tona Sparano whs driving the heavily loaded truck westward on Highway 92. The two cars met just west of the flume and east of the point where the east arm of Highway 60 merges with Highway 92, *163 The time was about 1:15 a. m. of August 28, 1941. The owner of the filling station heard the crash but did not observe the Chevrolet car nor see the accident. By the force of the collision appellant’s intestate, her husband, and the baby daughter of Mrs. Davis were killed and Mrs. Davis was seriously injured. The Chevrolet car was practically demolished. The injury to the truck was on its right front, but the damage to the Chevrolet car was on its left side, mainly from the left front to the middle of the car, the frame of which was buckled inward from the center of the left side. When struck, the Chevrolet was apparently at nearly right angles with the truck.

It is shown by the evidence that a black mark on the pavement forty-seven- or forty-eight feet in length, evidently made by the right front tire of the truck with the brake set,- curved in a southwesterly direction from the north half of Highway 92 to the south side of the paving. The witnesses differ as to measurements but all agree that the mark made by the tire began on the north half of the pavement and ended on the south half. There were four witnesses who testified about this black line. Paul Applegate, sheriff of Marion county, arrived on the scene about 1:45 or 1:50 a. m. on the morning of the accident. He testified that the mark commenced two to three feet from the north side of Highway 92 and went in an angle or curve direction to within four feet of the south side of Highway 92. In another part of his examination 'he stated that it ended about the center of the south lane of the highway and about twenty feet west of the flume. Roy Bingaman, who operated the filling station on the north side of the east arm of the Y, testified that he did not know how long the mark was, but it was from thirty to forty feet and ended about forty to fifty feet east of where the east prong of the Y joined Highway 92. He placed the point where the two highways join about forty-five to fifty feet west of the flume. Fred Clemensen, sheriff of Audubon county, did not reach the scene of the accident until the afternoon of the day it occurred. He testified that the black mark on the pavement began five feet six inches from the north edge of Highway 92 and extended southwest forty-seven feet. He stated there were twenty-seven feet plainly showing in length of what he thought was the rubber-burn mark of the tire *164

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.W.2d 266, 235 Iowa 159, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-greenberg-iowa-1944.