157 Iowa 222 | Iowa | 1912
— This action was brought by Clyde Scott, a minor, during his lifetime, in the name of George Scott, his next friend. During its pendency, but before trial, Clyde Scott died, and plaintiff, Blanche Scott, the administratrix of his estate, was substituted as plaintiff. It is not claimed that Clyde Scott died as a result of his injuries; but it is averred that he suffered personal injuries, was at expense for medical treatment, that he lost time, and that his horse was killed and his buggy and harness injured. In speaking of the plaintiff, we shall, unless otherwise stated, refer to Clyde Scott.
It is averred in the petition that plaintiff, while driving a single horse hitched to a top buggy, along a public highway in Johnson county, Iowa, known as the lower Muscatine road, traveling in a southeasterly direction, met the defendant, who was coming from an opposite direction in a large high-powered automobile at an excessive, unlawful and unreasonable rate of speed, with the lights of his car in an imperfect condition, and that he (defendant) reck
Testimony regarding buggy and automobile tracks near tbe scene of tbe accident, was objected to as calling for tbe conclusion of tbe. witness. Manifestly these objections are untenable.
6. Evidence: wfthsaat!de-s cedent. Mrs. Kate Scott, Clyde’s mother, was called as a-witness and permitted to testify, over objection, that deceased-was ^er son> an(l that she had given him his time and permitted him to work for himself ; that he collected his own wages, attended to Ms own business affairs, and owned property in his own
It should, also be stated that the son Clyde, was married on November 16, 1910, which was something like three months after the accident. These are all the rulings on the testimony which need be considered.
IV. The trial court gave the following instructions:
If the jury disregarded the instructions of the court, the allowance for damages to the harness must have been small in any event, and such allowance would not call for a reversal. The verdict was small in view of the injuries sustained, and such errors as appear in the record aré not sufficient to call for a reversal.