38 Iowa 592 | Iowa | 1874
— I. This canse has before been in this court, when a judgment for plaintiff was reversed for erroneous instructions to the jury. See 36 Iowa, 52. It was there urged that the evidence was insufficient to. authorize the finding by
With due care we have given consideration to the evidence, and are of the opinion that upon the question of negligence, it sufficiently supports the verdict. We are not accustomed to discuss, at length, questions of this character. A very few words in this case will indicate the grounds upon which we base our conclusion. The plaintiff was employed in loading earth upon a train, to be transported to a place where an embankment was in process of construction. It was obtained from a bank of considerable height and was thrown upon the cars by the use of shovels in. the hands of laborers. The earth was loosened by picks and shovels, and when the bank had been sufficiently undermined, large quantities were thrown down by the use of levers introduced in the bank upon the surface. These means had been resorted to not long before plaintiff was injured, but were not successful in displacing the earth. Plaintiff and others were kept at work at the foot of the bank and, while thus employed, a large mass of earth fell upon him. In our opinion the jury was justified in finding that the efforts of defendant’s laborers to throw out the earth with levers caused it to fal-l, and that those in charge of the work, whose duty it was to direct plaintiff and exercise proper care for his safety, were negligent in not inspecting the condition of the bank and keeping watch to prevent accidents of the kind that followed. Neither do we think that the evidence shows negligence on the part of plaintiff. He was not in a position to see or know the effects produced by the levers, and it was no part of his duty to inspect or have a care of that
II. An instruction asked by defendant was refused. This-ruling is made the ground of an objection to the judgment. The instruction presents rules as to the effect of negligence of plaintiff, the care to be exercised by defendant’s employes and the risks assumed by plaintiff, which probably are not'objectionable in their main scope. But correct rules upon these various questions in the case were- given by the court in other instructions. The refusal to repeat them was not. error.
III. The court gave the following instruction:
“ 3. Laborers who are under the control and subject to-the order of a superior, or ‘ boss,’ in a general line of employment, trust more or less to his care and thoughtfulness in seeming them against injmies, which may arise from the work, or the surroundings of the work, to which he has assigned them; but such care and thoughtfulness is not required to be greater than ordinarily prudent men would exercise under like or similar circumstances. And if efforts had recently been made to dislodge the bank which subsequently fell upon the plaintiff, by prying on the upper surface of such bank, and the natural effect of such prying would be to weaken the supports of such bank, and such prying was done under the orders of said boss, then putting the plaintiff to work under such bank, might or might not be negligence, according to circumstances. It was the duty of such boss to 'examine the condition of such bank before placing the men to work at it. If such examination, made as an ordinarily prudent man would make it, gave no indication of its dangerous condition, then the defendant would not be liable. If, however, no such examination was made, or if it was made in a careless and negligent manner, then this would not be ordinary care, but would be such negligence as the law condemns. So, if the appearance of the bank would admonish a person, of ordinary experience of its dangerous condition, and such appearance was not manifest from the place where the plaintiff was working, and he did not otherwise know, or have reason to know, of such dangerous
Several objections are urged to the doctrines here announced, as well as criticisms upon the form in which they appear.
2. But it is urged that the jury was mislead into the conclusion that laborers under a superior are not required to exercise ordinary care, but may depend upon the care of the superior. We do not think such an inference could have been drawn by the jury from the language. Besides, the care to be exercised by plaintiff is.sufficiently stated in another instruction. The instructions, when considered together, could not mislead on this point.
Y. Lastly, it is urged that the verdict is excessive. The
We have considered all the points made by defendant’s counsel, and find no well founded objection to the judgment. It is therefore x
' Aeeirmedj