54 N.W. 315 | N.D. | 1892
. This is the second time this case has been before us. On the former appeal the opinion is reported in 2 N. D. 112; 49 N. W. Rep. 408. On the second trial the court directed the jury to find for the defendant. Judgment was entered on the verdict so directed. From that judgment this appeal is taken. Should the case have been submitted to the jury? It is necessary to review the evidence, as the facts seem to be somewhat different from those which appeared from the record o'n the former appeal. The plaintiff was injured while assisting in coupling an engine to a flat car, known as a “Union Tank Line Car.’ The car was standing on a switch. Plaintiff was directed by Dennis Shields, the foreman of the switching crew of which plaintiff was a member, to go with him to couple onto this car, and to transfer it to another track. Plaintiff turned the switch, and stepped upon the end board of the engine where Shields was standing. The engine then started eastward to back down to this car, which was only a few rods distant, — about 60 or 70 feet. The switch was a curved one. How great was the curve is not disclosed by evidence on this record. Plaintiff appears to have offered to prove that the curve was slight, but this offer was objected to, and the objection sustained by the court. Shields stood on the end board on the outside of the curve, while plaintiff stood on the end board on the inside of the curve. According to plaintiff’s testimony he was looking for a pin with which to make the coupling as the engine approached the car. Finding none lying on the drawhead of the car, he turned to the tool box in the rear end of the tank of the engine to look for one there. Discovering none there he next cast his eyes upon the ground to find one, and was still unsuccessful. Finally he espied one on the platform of the car near the end. The engine, he says, was at that time about twenty feet from the car, and moving slowly, about 2% miles an hour. He leaned over and grasped the pin, and was just in the act of setting it when he was caught between the end of the car and the end of the engine, and one of his pelvic bones crushed. The injury appeal's to be permanent and quite serious.
Whether plaintiff ought to have gone ahead and set the pin, and stepped to one side before the engine and- car came together, is also a question for the jury. Negligence and contributory negligence are generally matters of fact, and we think that in this case, under the present record, they should have been both submitted to the jury, under proper instructions. Radical changes in testimony excite more or less suspicion, but it is not for this court to say whether the plaintiff swore falsely on the second trial; nor was it the province of the trial court to settle this matter of fact either for or against the plaintiff. The judgment is reversed, and a new tidal ordered.