178 Iowa 176 | Iowa | 1916
The plaintiff sues as assignee of Mrs. A. F. Johnson, and alleges that, while his assignor was attempting to drive across a certain bridge, built and maintained by the defendant county, her horse fell into a hole in said bridge, or in the approach thereto, and that, in apprehension or fright caused by such accident, she jumped from the earriagve in which she was driving, and, without negligence on her own part, received a severe injury. ITe charges the defendant with negligence, in that the defective condition of the bridge, had existed for a long time without being repaired, and without fence or guard to prevent injury to persons rightfully traveling along the public way. Answering the claim thus made, defendant denies that it was in any manner negligent with respect to the bridge, and alleges that plaintiff’s injury, if any, was due to her own want of reasonable care. Upon trial to a jury, verdict was returned in plaintiff’s favor for $1,050, and from the judgment entered thereon, defendant has appealed. The appellant argues for a reversal on the following grounds:
“The crust broke off with the horse. You wouldn’t know, if you looked over the top, before the horse crumbled it by falling, and hadn’t made an examination underneath, that the dirt under the crust was eaten away.”
His statement is supported also by the undisputed fact that, when he came to the rescue, the horse was found in a sitting position, with its hind parts in the hole and its forefeet still upon the main structure of the bridge. The horse was .blind, but is described as being gentle, and had been frequently driven by the women of the family. There is no showing that it was not under the control of the driver. Mrs. Johnson did not know of the existence of the defect and did not discover it until the horse had fallen. She had with her another woman, with whom she carried on more or less conversation,- and together they noted the fields through which they were passing. Counsel say she did not look ahead at all, nor take any pains to ascertain whether there were any obstructions in the highway; but she does not so say, and no other witness attempts to speak concerning the fact in this respect. She does say she was visiting with her companion and noting the country scenery, but this is by no means inconsistent with the exercise of reasonable care in driving along a country road. She was, of course, bound to exercise
2. Negligence: contributory negligence: public higadition.s to °on" She cannot go heedlessly into a peril which is or should be manifest to the apprehension, of an ordinarily careful person, but 'she may rely, to a reasonable extent, on the assumption that the public authorities, to whose . . 1¶ . . , n keeping the care and maintenance of roads and bridges are committed, have done their duty. Whether a given act or omission is consistent with the care of an ordinarily prudent person is, with very rare exceptions, a question of fact, to be determined by the jury upon consideration of all the facts and circumstances, and we see nothing in the case before us to except it from the operation of this rule. If the witness Brunskill is to be believed (and his credibility was for the determination of the jury), the horse was moving along or very near the middle of the traveled path, and would have passed the defective spot in entire safety had he not broken through the crust or hardened surface into the space below, which had been hollowed out by the action of the water. . The condition described by the witness was not patent to a traveler over the road, and we cannot say that Mrs. Johnson was negligent in failing to discover and avoid it. In other words, the jury could well have believed that the woman did not drive the horse into the hole, but that the horse was trapped by the giving way of the road surface, which gave no external evidence of its weakness. It is true the woman was driving a blind horse, but that was not per se a negligent act. It probably imposed upon her more vigilant watchfulness to keep the animal in proper place in the road, but, as we have already said, the jury could have found from the evidence that he was in the usually traveled path. But one witness
IV. Complaint is made of the court’s failure to charge the jury, as requested, that notice to a township officer of the defect would not operate as notice to the county supervisors. "While the court did not instruct upon this point in the exact language of the request, it embodied the substance thereof in the charge given on its own motion, and the exception thereto is not well taken.
Other alleged errors ale assigned and argued; but in most respects they are ruled by the conclusions we have already announced, and none of them appears to be well taken. The testimony is sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury that defendant was negligent as charged, that Mrs. Johnson was thereby injured without contributory fault on her part, and the verdict is not manifestly excessive. The judgment is therefore — Affirmed.