117 Iowa 442 | Iowa | 1902
The injury complained of by plaintiff was-received while he was riding on horseback along the boulevard connecting Cedar Rapids and Marion, leading a stallion. It was caused by a car of defendant, which was-running along the street in the same direction in which plaintiff was going, coming in collision with him and the-horse which he was riding. The horse was killed by the-collision. Plaintiff’s injuries are alleged to be serious and. permanent, and he seeks to recover therefor, and in a separate count to recover the value of the horse, which belonged to one Bryant, the.claim against defendant having; been assigned by said Bryant to the plaintiff.
The grounds of negligence stated in the petition are-that defendant’s employe operating the car could, in the-exercise of ordinary care, have discovered plaintiff’s peril in time to have stopped the car and prevented the injury; that after he discovered the plaintiff’s peril he failed to-use ordinary care and diligence to stop the car and avoid the injury; that he failed to give warning of the approach of the car; and that he was running at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and negligently and carelessly failed to-have said car under control when approaching plaintiff;. and these allegations of negligence are all predicated with reference to the fact that plaintiff’s horse, without any fault or negligence on his part, had become fractious and unmanageable and beyond his control, and got upon defendant’s track, and that plaintiff was without negligence in connection with the injury. Each of these allegations-of negligence is denied. They were all submitted to the jury, and, except with reference to the allegation of failure-to give warning, there is no contention but that there is-some evidence to support a finding against the defendant.. The errors assigned relate to the giving and refusal of instructions, the overruling of a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict of the jury was the result of' passion and prejudice, and the exclusion of certain evidence-
Complaint is made of refusal to give instructions embodying the proposition that if there was another and reasonably convenient street which plaintiff could have taken in going from Cedar Rapids to Marion, and he had no knowledge as to how the horses, or either of them, would .act at the approach of an electric car from behind, it was negligent for him to take his horses along the street on which defendant’s line was operated. And complaint is also made of an instruction given in which the jury was told that if plaintiff knew that the horses in his charge, or either of them, might become frightened and unmanageable on the approach of a car, and he might have taken another road easily accessible, and thereby avoided the cars, and failed to do so, “this will.be for your consideration,” and left it to the jury “whether such neglect on the part of plaintiff contributed to the injury.” The court had already told the jury in another instruction that before plaintiff could recover he must show that “he was not guilty of any negligence which directly contributed to said injury.” We do not think that it constitutes negligence per se to take horses along a street on which a street car line is operated, without knowledge as to what will be the pfobable conduct of the horses on the approach of a car. It certainly cannot be true as a matter of law that one taking animals upon a street along which an electric car will pass should haye first tested or made inquiry as to the
The views we have expressed dispose of the objections to refusal to give instructions, and also of the objections to the instructions given! The general objection that the jury were not confined to a consideration of the grounds of negligence set out in the petition is not well taken, for the court specified these grounds in stating the issues, and the jury could not, in the light of what was said in the instructions taken together, have failed to understand that the findings of negligence referred to were limited to such grounds of negligence as were thus stated.