134 Iowa 374 | Iowa | 1907
At the intersection of Erie and Second streets, in Missouri Valley, is a blacksmith’s shop facing south on Erie street and extending back on the east side of Second street sixty feet. The sidewalk in front of the shop is twelve feet wide, and out farther is a small platform. The sidewalk along Second street is six feet wide, and about two feet farther out is a row of hitching posts connected with a chain. In the afternoon of November, 9, 1904, the plaintiff’s wife hitched his team, one to a post and the other to the chain, west of the shop and back from Erie street, a distance variously estimated by the witnesses at from thirty to sixty feet. A short time thereafter the defendant came along Erie street from the east in his automobile with gasoline motor, at a speed of about six miles an hour. He slacked up somewhat before reaching the shop, which was twenty feet wide, and came to a standstill with the front of his vehicle about two feet east of the east line of Second street, with defendant sitting therein eight feet further back, and two or three feet south of the platform. This platform was two or three feet wide, so the automobile when it stopped must have been- about eighteen or twenty feet south of the shop. If the automobile stopped twenty feet out from the shop and two feet from the street line, the team could not have been hitched back from Erie street more than about thirty-five feet, for the evidence that the horses were then in the line of vision from the automobile seat was undisputed. The defendant may have disconnected the power from the running gear some twenty-five feet before stopping, but the evidence was in sharp conflict as to whether “ the sparker or
If defendant was stopping but briefly, it was not negligence per se not to arrest the sparker., The evidence shows that he had come to the shop, as a neighborly act, to get certain repairs for Edgecome’s automobile, and expected to stay but a moment. As he anticipated starting again shortly, he was not negligent in allowing the explosions to continue, unless he saw that these- were frightening the team, or in the exercise of ordinary care ought to have noticed this, and by ordinary diligence might have stopped the explosions in time to have avoided the runaway. To determine this issue, it will be necessary to revert briefly to the evidence. Erom this it appears that the team broke loose at about the same time defendant stopped the automobile. The team did not come within his line of vision prior to that time. Some Avitnesses say the team escaped as the machine stopped, Avhile others placed it immediately thereafter, but hoAV long no one estimated, so that the record leaves it purely a matter of conjecture whether, by the exercise of ordinary dili
If it be conceded that the automobile had come to a stop before the team pulled back and escaped, this must have happened immediately upon the stopping, and there is nothing in the record to justify the conclusion that had defendant, as soon as he saw or might have seen that the team was frightened, arrested the sparker, this would have been in time to have obviated their escape. There was no proof of how long would be required to silence the exhaust, or the time which elapsed after the fright of the team before it escaped; nor is there anything in the record from which it might be inferred that, had defendant acted promptly when the north horse hacked, the explosions would have been interrupted before the other horse became frightened and both escaped. As' said, the escape of the team seems to have followed immediately upon the stopping of the automobile, and as that was not negligent, a case was not made out for the jury.— Reversed.