87 Iowa 206 | Iowa | 1893
The plaintiff, in substance, charges that on March 2, 1889, John Butler, in the discharge of his duty as an employee of the defendant, went between and under certain locomotive tanks of the defendant, to couple them, preparatory to their being moved; that there was then attached to one of said tanks a locomotive, in charge of an employee of the defendant who was unskilled, careless, and negligent, and that he carelessly and negligently moved, shoved, jammed, handled, and ran said tanks upon and over
It appears that the deceased had for several years been in the employ of the defendant company; that for the two years prior to his death he had been what was called a “clinker man.” He was at the time of his death thirty-seven years old. He was a small man, and lame in one hip. His habits were good. He was very industrious, and his pay amounted to about forty-five or forty-sis dollars per month. His ordinary duties, as clinker man, appear to have been performed in connection with an associate, and were as follows: When an engine came in from its run, it was taken by a man called the “yard hostler” to the clinker pit, where the clinker men knocked out the fire, and scraped the ash pan. The engine was then backed up to the water tank, where these same clinker men gave it water. It was then moved a little further, and they gave it sand.
V. The plaintiff, when recalled in rebuttal, was asked on cross-examination: “What did Eekerson say to you about using this man Holland ? ” An objection was sustained to the question, as not being proper cross-examination. The witness had been examined in chief with a view of impeaching the defendant’s witness Holland. She had not been asked anything relating to Eekerson. The proposed evidence was clearly not proper on cross-examination.
The deceased in the case at bar was killed while in the line of his employment. His business was to remove the ashes, cinders, and fire from locomotives, to supply them with water and sand, and to aid in moving or shifting engine tanks. In the proper performance of his duties, it is shown that it was necessary for the engine to be switched from the clinker pit track over onto another track, to take water, and it was required to be moved still further - in order to take sand. At such times the clinker man who was to sand and water the engine rode on the same. Whether the statute applies to ,a case like this depends on its phraseology, and the purpose and object sought to be attained by its enactment. In the cases heretofore cited, it has repeatedly been held that this statute was intended for the protection and benefit of employees, who, from the very nature of their employment, are exposed to the hazards peculiar to the business of using and operating a railroad. It is said ill Stroble v. Chi., M. & St. P. Railway Co., 70 Iowa, 555: “This negligence, to xender the corporation liable, must be of an employee, and affect a
X. We can not discuss the many other errors assigned. We have examined all of them, and have read with care the instructions given and refused, and find no reversible error.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.