Wilbur v. Iowa Power & Light Co.

275 N.W. 43, 223 Iowa 1349
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 28, 1937
DocketNo. 43906.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 43 (Wilbur v. Iowa Power & Light Co.) 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
Wilbur v. Iowa Power & Light Co., 275 N.W. 43, 223 Iowa 1349 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

On and prior to July 24, 1935, the defendant company was operating a high voltage transmission line along the southerly side of a public highway near Milo, Warren County, Iowa. Plaintiff resided on the north side of this road at an intersection with a north and south road. During the night of July 23, 1935, there was a heavy rain and wind storm in this vicinity and along the highway on which the electric line was constructed. As a result of the storm, two of the poles carrying high tension electric wires were blown down and fell partially across and extended 6 or 8 feet into the traveled part of the road. The third and fourth poles west of plaintiff’s house and the intersection were blown over.

A telephone line ran along the north side of the highway in question. During the forenoon of July 24, plaintiff discovered that the telephone line was out of order. This condition had occurred before, and either the plaintiff or her husband, after examining the telephone line, found the crossed wires and repaired them by separating the wires. The telephone wires could be reached by a person standing on the ground on the north side of the road, and prior to the time in question plaintiff on one or two occasions had thus repaired the telephone line. The record also shows that between 12 and 1 o’clock on the day in question, the plaintiff, in company with her daughter, left her home for the purpose of locating the trouble on the telephone wires on the north side of the road. She testifies that in looking for the trouble she walked westerly along the north side of the muddy road.

*1351 The highway between the fence lines was 52 feet wide, and the traveled portion 24 feet. The electric light poles were about one foot inside the fence line on the south side of the road.

The top of the two poles which had blown over and the crossarms and wire attached thereto extended 6 or 8 feet into the traveled portion of the highway. They did not rest on the ground, but were held up about one foot above the highway by the high tension wires connected with the second and fifth poles. The lowest wire on the erossarms of the fallen poles was about 50 inches from the ground. Plaintiff was about five feet tall, and the lower part of plaintiff’s head or neck came in contact with the lowest wire, as a result of which she received severe and serious bodily injuries, and is totally and permanently disabled.

At the time in question, there was a dense foliage about five feet high growing along the south side of the highway between the traveled portion of the road and the fence line. The foliage, however, did not extend into the traveled portion of the highway.

Plaintiff testified that as she was walking along the highway, she merely glanced up the road, saw no poles blown over, and paid no attention to the electric transmission line on the south side of the highway, but was engaged in looking at the telephone wires on the north side of the highway to find where they might be crossed. She testified that at the time she was walking along the highway, she did not know the electric poles and wires were down, and did not see them.

The record also shows that the plaintiff knew the high tension wires on the south side of the highway contained high voltage electricity, and that she knew the danger to be apprehended therefrom in case she came in contact therewith.

Although she testifies she was walking along the northerly side of the road, she must have unwittingly crossed over toward the south side, or she would not have come in contact with the high tension wire. She contacted the wire about 50 feet west of the third pole, as evidenced by the burned flesh and hair still found attached to the wire at that point.

At the close of the evidence, the ease was submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict of $43,000. Defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled on condition that plaintiff remit all in excess of $28,000. The remittitur was filed *1352 and judgment entered in that amount, from which defendant appeals.

One of the chief grounds of the motion for a new trial was that of newly discovered evidence, and defendant contends that the court erred in overruling the motion upon this ground. The motion was based upon a showing

“That after the case was submitted to the jury and the verdict returned, there first came to the attention of defendant newly discovered evidence * * *, which could not with reasonable diligence have been discovered and produced at the trial,
“That said newly discovered evidence will prove that * * * the day upon which the accident * * * occurred, at about 11:45 a. m., or thereabouts, Mr. Jobe H. Allen and his son Bernard D. Allen, of Ackworth, Iowa, were riding * * * along the public highway where the accident happened and saw the plaintiff * * * and her daughter, walking in an easterly direction on the south side of the highway, between the grader ditch and the south fence; that Mrs. Wilbur was stepping over the butt end of the westerly pole, which was broken and leaning out in the highway.
“As the record * * * stands, there is no direct evidence as to the manner in which plaintiff came in contact with the electric wires; there is no direct evidence that plaintiff at any time traveled to the south side of the highway; that the newly discovered evidence is material to the case.”

In support of the motion on tihis ground, defendant also offered the testimony of one Wilbur, superintendent of the Knoxville department of the defendant company, which includes the territory and lines operating around Milo, Iowa, and the line where plaintiff was injured. He testifies that under instructions of defendant’s attorneys, he made an investigation of the circumstances surrounding the accident, and that the facts disclosed by the newly discovered evidence were not learned by him until after the trial of the case; and “during the course of the investigation of the circumstances surrounding the accident, * * * he made inquiry of people residing in Milo and in the vicinity of the accident, to ascertain whether or not any person.had witnessed the accident and whether or not any person had traveled along that highway at and prior to the accident; that he did not learn from these inquiries any of the *1353 facts of the nature set forth in the statements of Jobe H. Allen and Bernard Allen, or any information which would lead him to believe that such facts existed'.”

Both of the Allens lived at Ackworth, which is about 5 or 6 miles from the scene of the accident. The superintendent also testified that he had no knowledge until he interviewed the Al-lens after the trial that they had any knowledge of the facts concerning the accident.

The affidavits of J. H. Allen and Bernard D. Allen attached to the motion for a new trial show substantially that

‘ ‘ They were engaged in carrying mail over Route 1 east and south of Ackworth, and that on the day of the accident, July 24, 1935, they saw the broken down electric transmission poles in question, and that as they drove by these poles they saw Mrs. Wilbur, the plaintiff, and her little girl, over by the south bank on the south side of the road. Mrs.

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275 N.W. 43, 223 Iowa 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-v-iowa-power-light-co-iowa-1937.