163 Iowa 58 | Iowa | 1913
Cottage Grove avenue in Des Moines extends east and west, as does University street, and both are inter
Reeve testified:
What first attracted my attention as I came up Twenty-first street was, after I got up along by the grade, where I could see level, I saw a car approaching on the right-hand side and the car coming toward me. I should judge when I saw it it was pretty close to the curb. I could not have passed that car on our right between him and the curb. When I approached him, I saw there was no room for me to go between him and the curb on the right-hand side because he was so close to my side of the curbing, and further when I saw I could not get through there, and he made no effort to turn and give me room, I turned to my left. He did not stop his car or give any warning or any signal that I saw. I passed his car on the left. I did not notice exactly the driveway he came out. I did not see him come out of the driveway. He was coming down along the right-hand side slowly and it was pretty hard to tell, me moving and him moving at the same time, what distance he had been running before I met him; it might have been one hundred feet or two hundred, maybe more; I could not tell. I did not come to any stop at all; I slowed down and I thought he had ample time to turn over to his side of the street before I met him. ... As I turned to the left I tried to apply my brakes. Q. What did the car do ? A. It did it so quickly that I do not know what it did.
The witness estimated the speed of his car at from twenty to twenty-two miles per hour and.proceeded:
Q. So it would be your best judgment you were very close the center? A. Pretty close to the center. Q. So you came long up then pretty close to the center and Bartholomew was about five feet from the east curb. A. Four or five feet. When I got pretty close to Bartholomew I turned to the left some, not much. A person would always suppose a man would keep on his own side of the street. Q. But you knew he was not? A. I knew he was not at that time. Q. Now how much space did you have to pass through to the west of Bartholomew without running into the west curb? A. Oh, I had quite a
The witness farther testified that the car belonged to Brothers; that he was sent by the Strong Motor Company to bring it to its repair shop and fix it; that Brothers told him the carbureter needed adjustment and the pump fixing; that he told plaintiff he was going to try the car out and invited
It is elementary that a traveler may make use of any portion of the highway he chooses (Wrinn v. Jones, 111 Mass. 360), and the circumstance that defendant ran his car to the east side of Twenty-First street is of no importance save as explaining his subsequent conduct. The car could not well have been turned to the south without making a curve which would carry it near the east curbing. And he had the lawful right to drive his car along that side; no ordinance of the city directing otherwise having been introduced in evidence until “meeting” the ear in which plaintiff was riding. Under the statute it then became his duty to turn to the right and allow Reeve’s ear to pass next the east crnbing, providing he, acting as an ordinarily prudent person, could have then safely turned his ear so as to have done so. Of course this depended on the distance the cars were apart and the rate of speed each was moving and in this case was a question for the jury to pass on.
If defendant, acting as an ordinarily cautious man, could have safely turned his car to the right, so as to have allowed Reeve’s car to pass on the other side, it was his duty to do so, and if he failed therein he must have been found to have been negligent.
III. Conceding defendant to have been negligent, were plaintiff’s injuries the proximate consequence thereof Í The cars did not collide. Reeve steered his to the left, and, according to the undisputed evidence, there was a space between defendant’s car and the west curb line of twenty-three feet or a little more, and both Reeve and plaintiff noticed that defendant was
That, although the plaintiff may not have been the driver of the wagon mentioned in the testimony, nevertheless plaintiff, situated as he was, had no right to rely implicitly upon the care and prudence of the driver on the seat beside, him for his own safety, but it was his duty, if said driver was approaching said Thirteenth street, on which cars were passing, at a careless rate of speed, to attempt to have him check
See, also, Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Boyts, 16 Ind. App. 640 (45 N. E. 814); Bush v. Railway, 62 Kan. 769 (64 Pac. 624); Davis v. Railway, 259 Fed. 10 (88 C. C. A. 488, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 424).
Though having authority to control the speed of the car, plaintiff made no effort to do so but instead by his silence acquiesced in its movement at an unlawful speed and thereby was guilty of negligence contributing to his injuries, which necessarily must defeat his recovery. Having reached this conclusion, there is no escape from adjudging the first impression of the learned judge the correct one and reversing the order granting a new trial. — Reversed.