170 Iowa 540 | Iowa | 1915
Glenn avenue is a public street in Sioux City extending east and west until it intersects with the Sergeant Bluff road, another street which runs substantially north and south. The Hawkeye Land Company undertook to improve a plat north and east of this intersection, in the course of which work it constructed a road or new street crossing Glenn avenue and continuing at an angle which brought the new way into connection with the Sergeant Bluff road at a point somewhat farther south. The plaintiff lives to the south of the place here described, and in going to the city and to church has b.een accustomed to drive over the streets we have named. In carrying the new street across Glenn avenue, the land company made a cut which was of sufficient dimensions to interfere quite materially for the time being with the travel upon the avenue. The excavation was being done by Betz, who had been hired by the land company to do that work under the directions of the company’s engineer at a specified price per yard. On the day in question, the plaintiff, who is a woman 64 years of age, drove to church and, on reaching the place where this work was in progress,
From the fact that the motion for directed verdict was sustained as to all of the defendants, it is quite apparent that the ruling was based on the first ground assigned, that the plaintiff was conclusively shown 'to have contributed to her injury by her own negligence; and this is the point which is chiefly relied upon by appellees in argument.
Whether the testimony makes a case in which the negligence, if any, of plaintiff’s son would be imputed to her, we neither consider nor decide; for even if we should hold with appellees upon that proposition, we still think the case was one for the jury. Quite in point in principle upon the question of contributory negligence of a person who undertakes to pass over a public way which he knows to be in a defective condition is the case of Fountain v. Des Moines, 164 Iowa 316, with the precedents there cited.
It follows from what we have said that the court erred in holding the plaintiff chargeable with contributory negligence as a matter of law.
For the reasons stated, the judgment below will be reversed and cause remanded to the district court for a new trial. — Reversed. ' '