103 Iowa 373 | Iowa | 1897
I. For some time prior to December 14,1894, plaintiff was an employe of the defendant, as foreman of its coal house at Elma, Iowa. The coal house consists of a house proper and sheds for the storing of coal and loading it into engines by the use of a derrick and chutes. A way to and from a floor of the coal house, to and from which plaintiff was required to go, was a ladder on upright posts or timbers, made by placing thereon strips of 2x4 lumber. At the top of the ladder was a projection of the floor in a way to effect getting to- and from1 the ladder safely. At the head of the ladder, and on the floor or platform, was placed a handhold for the use of the persons- using the ladder. On the fourteenth- day of December, 1894, the plaintiff, in descending the ladder, fell to the ground, and was injured, and, for the damage sustained, this action is brought. The petition charges negligence in various ways, and we copy the averments .as follows: “That, in the construction of said coal house and the machinery and appliances used therein, the defendant, its agents, servants, and employes, put in for use two stationary ladders leading from the ground to the coal chutes; that said ladders were negligently constructed
The particular question whether the handhold was nailed flat to the floor, or with the two-inch space, was made the turning point as to negligence so far as the handhold was concerned; and it appears that each party was so confident of being right that the stipulation was made." Later in the trial, some photographs, taken before the stipulation was made, were put in evidence, amounting to a practical demonstration that the handhold was not flat on the floor. At the conclusion of defendant’s evidence, plaintiff moved the court for leave to withdraw so much of the stipulation as admitted that the ladder was as it was originally constructed, and, as a reason, stated that the admission was inadvertently made; that, within two or three days before making the stipulation, the handhold had been changed without his knowledge, and with intent to deceive him, and procure the stipulation. The court denied the motion, and the admission remained for the purpose of the case. Plaintiff, in his testimony, says that he knows of no other reason for his fall except that he could not grasp the handhold; and, although ■ the petition contains other averments as to negligence, there is no proof of any other negligence causing the injury. Plaintiff alone knows how he came to fall, and he attributes his fall to
II. The court, in its first instruction, presente as an issue the negligence of the company in permitting the ladder to get out of repair, and remain so for an unreasonable length of time; and complaint is made because no such negligence is charged. It is time the negligence charged is only as to the construction originally, and there is reason to think the language was inserted through inadvertence, caused by some changes in the pleadings. We notice the point to avoid a repetition on another trial. The judgment is reversed.