140 Iowa 73 | Iowa | 1908
— For about three years prior to the date of the accident resulting in the injury complained of, plaintiff had been in the employ of defendant as a bridge carpenter, and in that employment had had experience in the work of the bridge gang, which included, not only bridge work proper, but repairing and keeping in order stockyards, water tanks, roundhouses, and water cranes. On the 13th of February, 1905, the water crane at defendant’s station at Oskaloosa was found to be out of order, and one Reed, the fdreman of the bridge gang, directed three of the gang, plaintiff, Hunt, and Pilgrim, who had been engaged in cleaning out water cars in another part of the yards, to put it in repair. These men, with the foreman, investigated the difficulty with the crane, and found that the standpipe, connecting about five feet underground'with the water main, and arranged so as to re-, volve as required on .ball bearings inside of a collar which extended above the' surface of the ground and was easily accessible, lrad been forced upward to a slight extent by the pressure of the water, so that the balls on which it should rest had fallen from their spindles on the inside of the collar to the bottom of the pit, and the crane could not be turned. This pit was about five feet long and four feet wide, covered with planking. The standpipe was about eight inches in diameter, of cast iron, from a half inch to an inch in thickness, and ten or twelve feet in height above the ground, and weighed about seven hundred pounds.
Hnder the direction of the foreman Hunt opened the pit, shut off the water which had been running, and, after the water in the pit had drained away, secured from the bottom the balls which had fallen from their spindles or
Returning to the water .crane, plaintiff was told by Hunt that the standpipe could be raised by crowbar, and Hunt, working in the pit, proceeded to raise the pipe some, little distance by prying under the lug, but plaintiff found
The negligence of the defendant through its vice-principal, the foreman, relied upon as a basis for recovery by plaintiff, is alleged to have consisted in failing to provide a sufficient number of men and suitable tools and appliances for the work which ifiaintiff was directed to do, and in failing to warn and instruct plaintiff in relation
We cannot see that there was any necessity for specific instruction with reference to the dangers involved, nor can we see how there is any escape from the conclusion that plaintiff assumed the risk of the method in which he and Hunt, under his direction, were proceeding to do the work. No extended discussion of the authorities relating to the duty to instruct and the assumption of risk seems to be necessary. In Anderson v. Illinois Central R. Co., 109 Iowa, 524, especially relied on for appellant, the negligence alleged was in the failing to furnish cant hooks with which to handle heavy round piles, for the purpose of rolling them.or shifting them from one, side to the other
The lower court did not err in directing a verdict for the defendant, and the judgment is affirmed.