25 N.W.2d 864 | Iowa | 1947
On May 25, 1945, plaintiff-appellant was riding in an automobile owned and operated by her husband, Frank M. Burwell. While proceeding north on U.S. Highway 169, a few miles north of Mount Ayr, their car collided with a truck being operated by defendant Burl Colvin and owned by defendant Edgar Siddens. The truck was proceeding in a southerly direction on said highway. As the result of the collision, appellant was seriously injured and her husband was killed. The jury returned a verdict for defendants.
Appellant alleged and set forth in her petition three grounds of negligence upon the part of the appellees: (1) Defendants, on meeting the motor vehicle in which plaintiff was riding, failed to give one half of the traveled way but drove their motor vehicle across the center of the highway and into the motor vehicle in which plaintiff was riding. (2) Defendants drove their motor vehicle on the highway and used thereon a pneumatic tire when such tire was worn to the extent that more than two layers of fabric or cords were exposed on the entire traction surface. (3) Defendants drove their motor vehicle on the highway without having the same equipped with brakes adequate *647 to control the movement of and to stop and hold such vehicle. Defendants by answer claimed plaintiff and her husband were engaged in a joint enterprise and that the accident was caused by the negligence of Frank Burwell.
Appellant, when she rested her main case, withdrew specification of negligence No. 3. At the close of the testimony, the trial court, upon the motion of the defendants, withdrew negligence specification No. 2, and submitted the case to the jury on specification No. 1.
Appellant advances three propositions as a basis for reversal:
(1) The trial court erred in failing to admit as evidence the tires of defendants' truck.
(2) The trial court erred in construing section 5034.49, Code of Iowa, 1939 (section
(3) The trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that plaintiff was a guest of her husband as a matter of law and therefore any negligence of her husband was not imputable to plaintiff.
[1] I. We have carefully considered the instructions given in this case and find no merit in appellant's assignment of error No. 3. In determining the correctness and sufficiency of an instruction, the instructions must be considered as a whole. Olson v. Cushman,
These instructions, read as a whole, correctly state the law and fully protect appellant's rights. Schuster v. Gillispie,
II. Appellant also alleges error in the court's refusal to accept in evidence tires from appellees' truck. This assignment of error is so interwoven with the remaining assignment of error that they should be considered together.
[2] Appellant assigns as negligence upon part of the appellees the violation of section 5034.49, Code, 1939 (section
"No pneumatic tire shall be used on a motor vehicle when such tire is worn to the extent that more than two layers of fabric or cords are exposed on the entire traction surface."
This section would appear to prohibit the mere owning or possessing such a tire, if upon a motor vehicle, even though it might be used solely upon the owner's premises. It must be read in connection with section 5033.01, Code, 1939 (section
[3] The tires, offered in evidence, were from the left front wheel, the left rear inside dual wheel, and the left rear outside dual wheel. Exhibit 18, certified to this court, was the left inside dual wheel and tire. It is self-evident that this tire violated the purpose and intention of section
III. The trial court, after refusing to submit appellant's specification of negligence No. 2, withdrew from the record as exhibits the three tires heretofore referred to. While we feel that they should have been received as exhibits, the error in rejecting them is not prejudicial to the extent of calling for a reversal.
There being no reversible error in the lower court, its judgment should be and is — Affirmed.
All JUSTICES concur. *650