Chandler v. Harger

Decision Date06 February 1962
Docket NumberNo. 50438,50438
PartiesMax L. CHANDLER, Appellant, v. Herman HARGER, Appellee. Ervin B. KOONCE, Appellant, v. Herman HARGER, Appellee.
CourtIowa Supreme Court

Richard C. Turner, Council Bluffs, and Thaine Q. Blumer, Kansas City, Mo., for appellants.

Smith, Peterson, Beckman & Willson, Council Bluffs, for appellee.

SNELL, Justice.

This appeal involves two actions for damages following a collision of motor vehicles. The two actions involve the same basic problems. They were consolidated for trial and appeal.

Plaintiff, Ervin B. Koonce, was driving and plaintiff, Max L. Chandler, was riding in a car owned by Chandler. They were traveling in an easterly direction on U. S. Highway 275. Defendant, Herman Harger, was driving his loaded tractor-trailer in a westerly direction on the same highway. The vehicles collided with resulting property damage and personal injury to plaintiffs. Both plaintiffs were thrown from the car. The collision occurred on a curve of 2~30' in sharpness and 25~30' in total change of direction. The curve is banked. The highway is paved concrete with nine inch wide curbs on both sides and measuring 20 feet wide from curb top to curb top. Plaintiffs claim defendant failed to yield one half of the traveled way and was 18 inches over the center line on plaintiffs' side. Defendant claims that he was on his own side of the road and that plaintiffs were over the center line and ran into his vehicle.

The jury found for defendant. Plaintiffs, on appeal, challenge the admissibility of certain evidence, the refusal of a requested instruction and the giving of a claimed prejudicial instruction.

Defendant called several witnesses in his behalf, including two highway patrolmen and one former patrolman who was a member of the patrol at the time of the collision. The latter's testimony and exhibits received in connection therewith provide the first issue here. The accident happened more than three years prior to trial, which may explain the uncertainty of his testimony. He refused to either admit or deny the preparation and signing of a field memorandum. This memorandum, exhibit 20, was later identified by the other patrolmen as having been prepared by the former patrolman. The exhibit, on a Department of Public Safety Field Memorandum form, is a rough, freehand drawing of the curved highway. It shows the width of the shoulders on the highway, the location of the vehicles, parts and debris after the collision and some distances. This exhibit was offered in evidence by plaintiffs. Counsel for defendant stated, 'No objection.' The exhibit was then admitted. According to plaintiffs the exhibit tended to impeach the witness. The exhibit having been received without objection, its admissibility is not before us.

I. While testifying the witness was shown what is obviously a paper from a small loose-leaf notebook. He testified that the rough drawing, notations and comments thereon were in his handwriting and were notes he made at the scene of the accident. It was identified as exhibit 21 and was offered in evidence by defendant.

Over plaintiffs' objections that it was hearsay, irrelevant and immaterial, contrary to his own testimony and containing information held to be irrelevant and immaterial, it was finally admitted.

The exhibit should not have been received.

On exhibit 21 a diagram appears showing the point of impact on defendant's side of the road, the break in the paving directly opposite, glass, dirt and debris on defendant's side of the road, also the words on the face: 'Pavement dry--both men drinking--Liquor stolen out of car. Both men out of car--driver not known' and 'Break in pave--First mark on pavement by truck 23"' from north shoulder.' Also marked on the face was '(over).' On the back appear the words: 'talked to both men at Hospital. Stated they didn't know who was driving or what actually happened.

'Both men had been drinking. Had head injuries unable to determine how much. But odor of liquor very prominent. Chandler works for produce co.'

The witness' testimony as to some of the matters shown on the exhibit had been rejected. There was evidence from the odor of alcohol that at some time and place the plaintiffs had been drinking, but it is not proper to support testimony as to the witness' observations with a written statement of his own conclusions. Defendant tried to create a suspicion but had no evidence of intoxication other than the odor of alcohol. There was no evidence in the record to support the statement 'Liquor stolen out of car,' and nothing to indicate how the witness arrived at such a conclusion.

II. What plaintiffs said to the officer while making his official investigation was not admissible. Bachelder v. Woodside, 233 Iowa 967, 9 N.W.2d 464; McBride v. Stewart, 227 Iowa 1273, 290 N.W. 700; Vandell v. Roewe, 232 Iowa 896, 6 N.W.2d 295.

III. The exhibit was not offered for impeachment. It was offered by counsel in connection with the testimony of his own witness to augment and support the testimony. It was even more than that. It was a statement of unsupported conclusions of the witness.

Evidence of contradictory statements made out of court are admissible as tending to discredit and impeach a witness but they are not admissible as affirmative proof of the facts related in the statement. Christensen v. Iowa State Highway Commission, 252 Iowa ----, 110 N.W.2d 573, 575, and citations. See comments by Dean Mason Ladd in Workshop Outlines, Eighty-sixth Annual Meeting of the Iowa State Bar Association, page 138 et seq.

IV. Defendant contends that exhibit 21 was admissible under the provisions of section 622.20 of the Code. This section provides: 'When a detached act, declaration, conversation, or writing is given in evidence, any other act, declaration, conversation, or writing which is necessary to make it fully understood, or to explain the same, may also be given in evidence.'

Exhibit 21 was an entirely separate writing from exhibit 20. It was not necessary to understand or explain exhibit 20. Plaintiffs' offer of exhibit 20 and defendant's agreement to its receipt did not open the door to unsupported conclusions and privileged statements in another writing. Jones v. Krambeck, 228 Iowa 138, 290 N.W. 56.

Posed photographs, drawings and diagrams are frequently admitted, after proper foundation, as illustrative of the testimony of witnesses. Stiefel v. Wandro, 246 Iowa 807, 68 N.W.2d 53, and cases cited. This does not mean that such exhibits are in themselves independent evidence.

Defendant cites only one case in support of his position. Spani v. Whitney, 172 Neb. 550, 110 N.W.2d 103, was an automobile collision case. Three days after the accident plaintiff voluntarily wrote out a statement of his version of the accident and gave it to the sheriff. On cross-examination of plaintiff, defendant's counsel had the statement marked as an exhibit and examined plaintiff relative thereto. The exhibit was offered by plaintiff and received. The Nebraska statute is similar to ours and provides: '* * * When a detached act, declaration, conversation or writing is given in evidence, any other act, declaration or writing which is necessary to make it fully understood, or to explain the same, may also be given in evidence.'

The Nebraska court then said: 'The concluding sentence gives the reason for the rule.' We agree...

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5 cases
  • Yost v. Miner
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • December 10, 1968
    ...automobile while intoxicated is a violation of section 321.281, Code of Iowa. However, it is not negligence per se. Chandler v. Harger, 253 Iowa 565, 570--572, 113 N.W.2d 250, and citations; Cramer v. City of Burlington, supra; Ward v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co., 85 Wis. 601, 55 N.W. ......
  • Sechler v. State
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • November 23, 1983
    ...evidence of contributory negligence so as to bar recovery. Yost v. Miner, 163 N.W.2d 557, 561 (Iowa 1968); Chandler v. Harger, 253 Iowa 565, 571-72, 113 N.W.2d 250, 253 (1954); Nicholson v. City of Des Moines, 246 Iowa 318, 324, 67 N.W.2d 533, 537 (1954). A drunken driver may be found negli......
  • Ward v. Loomis Bros., Inc.
    • United States
    • Iowa Court of Appeals
    • March 30, 1995
    ... ... at 766; see also Yost v. Miner, 163 N.W.2d 557, 561 (Iowa 1968); Chandler v. Harger, 253 Iowa 565, 572, 113 N.W.2d 250, 253 (1962); Nicholson v. City of Des Moines, 246 Iowa 318, 324, 67 N.W.2d 533, 537 (1954). A drunken ... ...
  • Board of Water and Light Trustees of City of Muscatine v. City of Muscatine
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • February 6, 1962
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