Rogers v. Jefferson, 43740.

Decision Date11 February 1938
Docket NumberNo. 43740.,43740.
Citation223 Iowa 718,277 N.W. 570
PartiesROGERS v. JEFFERSON.
CourtIowa Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from District Court, Black Hawk County; A. B. Lovejoy, Judge.

This is an action at law for damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff in a collision between an automobile in which she was riding while it was being driven by her son, and one driven by the defendant. The defense was a general denial. The court overruled defendant's motion for a directed verdict, and the cause having been submitted to the jury, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

Affirmed.

Hal H. Mosier, of Waterloo, and Hal W. Byers and McMartin, Herrick & Langdon, all of Des Moines, for appellant.

McCoy & Beecher, of Waterloo, for appellee.

SAGER, Justice.

Appellee concedes the substantial accuracy of appellant's statement of facts, so we adopt it with some modifications which seem conducive to brevity.

This accident happened about 6 o'clock on the evening of August 25, 1934, about 3 miles west of Dunkerton, at an intersection of north and south and east and west graveled county trunk roads. The appellee, Pearl Rogers, and her husband and son were on their way home from Waterloo. The son, George, eighteen years of age, was driving, with his father sitting beside him. The mother (plaintiff-appellee herein) was in the back seat. They were traveling north. Defendant-appellant was accompanied by his wife and one son in the front seat and another son in the back seat, and was driving easterly toward the intersection where the accident occurred. The intersecting highways were about the same width. The day was clear and the roads were dry. At the southwest corner of the intersection was a pasture in which there was nothing to prevent the drivers of the cars involved from seeing each other as they approached the intersection.

The driver of appellee's car testified that as he drove north to the intersection he saw the appellant's car coming from the west at about the same distance as he was from the crossing, to wit, about 30 rods. Both cars were traveling, according to his estimate, at approximately the same rate of speed, 30 to 35 miles per hour. After seeing appellant's car at the distance stated, he proceeded north, and did not again see the car until the instant of collision. The husband of appellee testified that he did not look to the west (the direction from which appellant was coming) at any time; and appellee looked only to the right to see that there was no car coming from that quarter, and did not see appellant's car until the moment of collision.

The witness Wehling, working in a field nearby, saw both cars approaching, appellant's at about 30 miles per hour, and testified that he thought there was going to be an accident because they were both going about the same speed and neither one seemed to slow up.”

Appellant saw the car in which appellee was riding when the latter was at a distance of about 1500 feet from the intersection, and thereafter did not see it again until “just a fraction of a second before the collision.” According to the testimony of the appellant, the cars met in such a way that his right front corner and the left front corner of the other car collided.

The testimony of appellee's son differed somewhat from that of appellant in this regard. He said: “* * * Their car struck ours behind the front wheel-the rear part of the front wheel and the whole side...

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2 cases
  • Geisking v. Sheimo
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • 18 Octubre 1960
    ...and to act accordingly, in the absence of knowledge to the contrary. In Rogers v. Jefferson, 223 Iowa 718, 721, 272 N.W. 532, 534, 277 N.W. 570, we said: 'In any event, we think that appellee's son was warranted in assuming that the 'Slow' sign was placed there by proper authority, and that......
  • Puhrmann v. Lund
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • 16 Octubre 1962
    ...v. Smith, 217 Iowa 1295, 253 N.W. 147; Schwind v. Gibson, 220 Iowa 377, 260 N.W. 853; and Rogers v. Jefferson, 223 Iowa 718, 272 N.W. 532, 277 N.W. 570. Reversed and All Justices concur. ...

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