104 Iowa 482 | Iowa | 1898
It is first urged that the lower court erred in the first instruction in stating the issues to the jury. We are referred to assignments of error 26 to 31, inclusive.
The objections urged to the- seventh instruction we can dispose of briefly by saying that they are without merit. That instruction presents only a single phase of the case. It does not pretend to, nor, indeed, would it be possible for it to, include all the issues and at the same time be intelligible.
Error is assigned on the lower court’s refusal to give the fifth instruction asked by defendant. This instruction was with relation to, defendant’s right to use piling owned by the plaintiff to make repairs on the bridge. We cannot see how this matter was material, and think the trial j udge was. right in refusing to give it.