This is the second appeal in this case. The former opinion appears in 197 Iowa 1118.
Only a partial statement of the record is necessary, so far as the questions involved in the appeal are concerned.
Eighth Avenue in the city of Vinton runs north and south. Appellant's tracks, six in number, cross Eighth Avenue. To the west of Eighth Avenue and between Tracks 3 and 4 is the freight house of appellant. This freight house stands 68 feet west of the center of Eighth Avenue. About five blocks west of Eighth Avenue, between Tracks 3 and 4, is the passenger station of appellant.
On the day in controversy, appellee was driving south on Eighth Avenue. He crossed Tracks 1, 2, and 3, and the accident occurred on Track 4, where his car was struck by appellant's passenger train, coming from the west.
One of the claims made by appellee is that each of the three tracks to the west of Eighth Avenue had box cars standing thereon, which obstructed his view to the west, and that for that reason he could not see the passenger train, as and after it left the station. While it is admitted that there were cars on Track 1, the north track, the company claims that there were no box cars on Tracks 2 and 3, and that, had appellee looked, after he passed Track 1, he could have seen the approaching train, and thus avoided the accident.
We have numbered these tracks Nos. 1 to 6, beginning with the north track.
Appellant tendered a witness, one Stewart, who saw the accident. Stewart says that, immediately 1. RAILROADS: thereafter, he walked to a point about the accidents at center of Track 3 and the center of Eighth crossings: Avenue, and that, from where he stood, looking obstruc- west, he could see the main line, Track 4, from tions: evi- the passenger station to the west end of the dence pro freight house. The court refused to admit the and con. testimony thus proffered. It appears to us that this was very material testimony for the appellant, and should have been *Page 899 admitted. If what the witness said was true, it tended to squarely negative the contention of appellee that the view to the west was obstructed by cars on Track 3, the place where the witness stood. It also tends to negative the testimony of appellee himself that he stopped his car on Track 3 and looked to the west, but could not see the approaching train because his view was obstructed by cars on that track. State v. Nowells,135 Iowa 53; Lawrence v. City of Sioux City, 172 Iowa 320; Burg v.Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co., 90 Iowa 106; Snakenberg v. Minneapolis St. L.R. Co., 194 Iowa 215; Houston T.C.R. Co. v. Ramsey,43 Tex. Civ. App. 603 (97 S.W. 1067); Vandalia R. Co. v. Duling,60 Ind. App. 332 (109 N.E. 70).
The appellant requested several instructions, stating in different forms the doctrine designated as a physical-fact rule, the substance of which is that if, in approaching this track, the appellee's view of the approaching train was 2. RAILROADS: unobstructed, he is held by the law to have seen accidents at the train, and was, therefore, guilty of crossings: contributory negligence. The court refused all "physical of the instructions asked by appellant on this fact" rule: subject, and did not cover it in the diverting instructions given. True, it was a disputed circum- question whether or not the appellee's view was stance. obstructed; but, if the jury concluded that his view was not obstructed, then of course this doctrine would apply. In our judgment, it should have been given. Appellee meets this proposition by contending that this rule has no application where there are diverting circumstances, and cites Glanville v.Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co., 196 Iowa 456, and High v. Waterloo,C.F. N.R. Co., 195 Iowa 304. Neither of these citations decides the question of a diverting cause or circumstance; but, be that as it may, the evidence of appellee himself shows the following condition: When he drove onto Track 3, which is 60 feet north of Track 4, the main-line track, where the accident occurred, he stopped his car, and, looking to the east, he saw a freight train about 300 feet from the crossing where the accident occurred. This train was standing still. He says he noticed it, but gave no further attention to it. Under these circumstances, the standing freight train cannot be said or considered to be a diverting cause or circumstance. *Page 900 Guhl v. Whitcomb, 109 Wis. 69 (85 N.W. 142). We are satisfied, under the record, that appellant was entitled to an instruction calling for an application of the physical-fact rule.
In a colloquy between the court and counsel, during the trial, the court announced that the measure of damages would be the difference between the value of the car immediately before and immediately following the accident. In its instructions to the jury, the court, after having advised the jury what was necessary for appellee's recovery, proceeded:
"You will then consider the proposition of damages in favor of the plaintiff, and proceed to assess the damages herein to which the plaintiff is entitled, as shown by the evidence. In such sum you should take into consideration the value of 3. DAMAGES: the automobile, as shown by the evidence, measure of immediately before the happening of the damages: accident, and the value of the automobile, as failure to shown by the evidence, immediately after the limit happening of the accident; but in no event can findings. your verdict herein against the defendant exceed the gross sum of $1,000."
This instruction is objected to by appellant from two angles: First, that it does not confine the jury, in its finding of damages, to the difference in the value of the car before and after the accident. A reading of this 4. DAMAGES: instruction shows that this is a valid objection measure of to the instruction as written. It simply says to damages: the jury that they may take into consideration article of the difference in values, but it does not limit personalty: them to that in determining the damages. The reparable second contention against this instruction is and equally as, if not more, serious, to wit: that, irreparable if it is construed to limit the jury, in injury. assessing damages, to the difference in the value of the car before and after the accident, that rule has no application to the facts in the case. The evidence describes the condition of the car after the accident. Appellee introduced testimony showing the total cost of repairing the car. The repair bill amounted to $223.57. True, the appellee gives his opinion that the fact that the car had been in a railroad accident hurt its value for resale purposes, but this does not aid things much in this respect. There *Page 901 seems to be a slight misunderstanding of our cases on this question, but we deem the following to be the general rules of law governing such matters:
1. When the automobile is totally destroyed, the measure of damages is its reasonable market value immediately before its destruction.
2. Where the injury to the car can be repaired, so that, when repaired, it will be in as good condition as it was before the injury, then the measure of damages is the reasonable cost of repair plus the reasonable value of the use of the car while being repaired, with ordinary diligence, not exceeding the value of the car before the injury.
3. When the car cannot, by repair, be placed in as good condition as it was in before the injury, then the measure of damages is the difference between its reasonable market value immediately before and immediately after the accident.
These three rules are deducible from the following authorities:Carruthers v. Campbell, 195 Iowa 390; Anderson v. United StatesR. Adm., 193 Iowa 1041; Pugh v. Queal Lbr. Co., 193 Iowa 924;Herrick v. Merchants T. S. Co., 187 Iowa 862; Huddy on Automobiles (7th Ed.), Sections 868, 872; Berry on Automobiles (4th Ed.), Sections 1071 to 1085.
Some things are said in some of our cases, mostly by way of dictum, which do not harmonize with the above rules; but, to the end that the rules may be clearly stated and understood by the bench and bar, we have put them in the above form. Under these rules, the court, in its instructions, gave to the jury an incorrect rule for measuring the damages.
Some other matters are urged on our attention, but they will probably not arise on a retrial of the case, and we give them no further attention. — Reversed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and EVANS and MORLING, JJ., concur. *Page 902