128 Iowa 677 | Iowa | 1905
Eor several years prior to the accident in question W. S. Arenschield had been in the employ of the defendant aá locomotive engineer upon its lines in and about the town of Eldon, Iowa^ On January 1, 1903, said engineer was in charge of a locomotive hauling a work train or pile driver on one of the lines of defendant’s road, and during the forenoon of that day brought his train into the Eldon .yard in order to clear the track for another train. The yard contains several tracks and side tracks, extending substantially east and west, over which engines and trains are fre
It is the claim of the administrator of his estate that the injury and death of the deceased were occasioned by the
It is fairly shown that Arenschield had formerly oper
It is not claimed that the deceased was a trespasser, or that (except for the alleged assumption of risk) he was not entitled to rely upon the exercise of reasonable care by the appellant and its employes in the operation of its trains and
II. Error is assigned upon the eighth paragraph of the court’s charge, which reads as follows:
It is said in support of this exception that the words, “ or to station a man upon the crossing and the rear of the engine,” as employed in this paragraph, authorized the jury to find the appellant chargeable with negligence, unless it provided both a lookout on the rear of the engine and a watchman or guard at the crossing; and that “ there is no evidence of any rule, practice, or custom ever prevailing or known whereby the defendant was required, or in the exercise of due care should have been required,” to take both of these precautions against possible accident.
Segregating a single clause of this paragraph from its context, it may be given .the'meaning put upon it by counsel; but, when taken as a whole, it is not fairly susceptible of such construction. The court was calling attention to the various acts or phases of negligence alleged by the plaintiff, and said to the jury, in substance, that whether there was any want of reasonable care on part of defendant in either or all of these respects depended upon the surrounding circumstances and the nature and extent of the apparent dangers to be guarded against. Of this statement it is obvious that neither party may properly complain. In saying this we do not mean to be understood as holding that, even as interpreted by counsel, the instruction would necessarily be held erroneous. We are not prepared to say that if-defendant’s engine, equipped with a high tender shutting off a ¡dew of the track from the enginemen, was sent backward at a high rate of speed down the sharp grade from the chute and over the crossing at its foot, the jury may not have been justified in finding that due care for the lives of those right
No reversible error being shown, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. ■