180 Iowa 1319 | Iowa | 1917
This is an action for damages claimed to have resulted to plaintiff from a collision of his bicycle with the motor cycle of defendant. The accident occurred at the intersection of Kelly and Brantingham Streets in Charles City, Iowa. The negligence charged is that the defendant was, at the time, operating his motor cycle at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and in a careless, reckless and imprudent manner, and in excess of the speed limit prescribed by the ordinances of Charles City; and that he failed to have the same equipped with proper horn or bell, and to sound a signal or give warning of his approach. Plaintiff was riding a bicycle on Brantingham Street, going south, and he claims that, while in the exercise of due care upon his part, defendant ran his motor cycle into the bicycle, throwing plaintiff upon the ground in such a manner as to fracture his arm and to inflict severe and painful injuries upon the
The ordinances of Charles City were offered in evidence, and fix the maximum speed for motor cycles in said city at 15 miles per hour, and upon Main Street at 10 miles per hour. At the time of the accident, defendant was going-east on Kelly Street, approaching the intersection of said street with Brantingham Street. Plaintiff testified that, when he first observed the motor cycle approaching, it was a block and across one street from the intersection of Kelly and Brantingham Streets; that he attempted to cross said intersection at about 10 or 12 miles an hour; that defendant’s motor cycle was being operated at a rate of speed between 35 and 40 miles per hour; and that, when he reached a point about 45 feet west of plaintiff, he changed his course as he approached him, and then turned south to the curbing.
From the abstract of plaintiff’s testimony, we quote the following:
“He turned right south to the curbing, and when I saw that he turned that way toward the curbing, I aimed to see if I could make the turn and get in a little pocket there that would let him go by; but he got me. I did not have time. The collision was south of the course Starr had been traveling and east of the course that I had been traveling, and was 6 or 8 feet west of the southwest corner of the intersection.”
Plaintiff further claimed that the motor cycle gained speed as it approached him. This claim is borne out by the testimony of defendant. It further appears from the. evidence that a man was sitting on the gasoline tank in front of defendant on his motor cycle, with his feet hanging down and reaching within a few inches of the ground.
The defendant’s version of the accident, in substance,
This case has been twice tried in the court below. The first trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1, and the second in favor of the defendant. The record does not disclose the ground upon which a new trial was granted defendant after the first trial. Thirty-five alleged errors are' complained of by counsel for appellant, most of which relate to the admission or exclusion of evidence. Some complaint, however, is made of the instructions given to the jury by the court upon its own motion, of the refusal to give several requested instructions, and of misconduct upon the part of counsel for defendant in the examination and cross-examination of witnesses.
Section 1571-ml7 of the Supplement to the Code, 1913, requires motor vehicles to be equipped substantially as set forth in the requested instruction, but appellant testified that he saw defendant approaching on his motor cycle more than a block away, and observed the movements thereof , from that time until the collision occurred. The court held, in excluding the evidence offered by appellant, that it was immaterial whether the motor vehicle was equipped as required by statute, or signal given, for the reason that the failure to have the same so equipped or to signal was in no wise the cause of the injury complained of; that is, that every purpose of a signal was met by the fact that plaintiff saw the motor vehicle at so great a distance that the giving of a signal would not have availed to prevent the injury, and the failure to give the same doubtless in no wise contributed thereto. We think that, under the facts disclosed, the exclusion of the testimony and the refusal to give the instruction, if erroneous, was without prejudice.
The reasons above given dispose of the assignment of alleged error on account of the refusal of the court to give Instruction No. 3.
“If you find from the evidence in this case that the defendant, Percy Starr, was operating a motor vehicle on a public highway at the time of the injury in question, and further find*1326 that the defendant, Percy Starr, was running at a rate of speed in excess of twenty-five (25) miles an hour, that fact would he presumptive evidence of driving at a rate of speed which is not careful or prudent in case of injury to the person or property of others.”
The.instruction was proper; but was the refusal to give the same prejudicial to appellant? The question of defendant’s negligence -was submitted to the jury by the court in a proper instruction. It was told that, if plaintiff was operating his motor vehicle at a rate of speed in excess of that permitted by the ordinance of the city, which, as above stated, was 15 miles per hour, same would be negligence. The jury found the facts in favor of the defendant, Avlief upon the ground that defendant was not negligent in the operation of his motor cycle, either in the manner of operating same or the speed at which same was being operated, or because plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, is not shown. In any event, in view of the verdict of the jury, we do not think the refusal to give the instructions was prejudicial. The court’s instructions permitted the jury to find the defendant negligent if it appeared from the evidence that he Avas operating his machine at a rate of speed in excess of 15 miles an hour. Had The instruction been given, plaintiff could not have been aided thereby.
Numerous other alleged errors are assigned in the admission and exclusion of testimony, and some of the rulings of the court thereon may have been erroneous, both in the admission and exclusion thereof, but, upon a careful examination and analysis of the whole record, we are unable to
XI. Some time after the jury retired to deliberate upon its verdict, the panel was brought in and interrogated by the court as to the probability of a verdict’s being reached. Appellant complains because his attorneys were not notified and given an opportunity to be present, but the record contains the questions of the court and the answers of the jurors, and, without setting them out herein, we think the court committed no error in this regard.
It is our conclusion, therefore, upon the whole record, that the judgment of the lower court should be and the ■same is — Affirmed.