145 Iowa 560 | Iowa | 1909
The plaintiff’s intestate was a hoseman connected with the Des Moines fire department, and he was killed in a collision between a hose wagon and one' of the defendant’s street cars. The accident occurred at the intersection of Walnut Street and Sixth Avenue a little after nine o’clock at night in January, 1907. The hose wagon belonged at a fire station located on East Walnut Street, and at the time of the accident it was responding to a fire call from a point west of Sixth Avenue and was moving rapidly along Walnut Street close to the north side thereof. The defendant has tracks running east and west on Walnut Street and north and south on Sixth Avenue, and a general waiting room from which all of its city cars radiate on Sixth avenue one block south of the place of the collision. The car that collided with the hose wagon was a north-bound Sixth Avenue car. It had left the waiting station but a few moments before, and, after making two or three stops before reaching the Walnut Street track, it went on and struck the hose wagon near the north curb line of Walnut Street. Among the acts of negligence alleged in the petition were these: “That the defendant was negligent in that its motorman, I. M. Bonar, did not pay any heed or attention to the ringing of the gong on the said hose wagon as it approached Sixth Avenue; that the. defendant was further negligent in that its motorman did not see the -hose wagon and the horses attached thereto, as they approached Sixth Avenue, before his vision was obstructed by the car of the defendant, which was standing just east of Sixth. Avenue; that the defendant was further negligent in that its said motorman did not look for the approach of - the said hose wagon and horses thereto attached, or other vehicles, before moving his car northward
It is clearly the duty of the driver or motorman of á street car, in the exercise of reasonable care under, the
The appellant contends, also, that there is no evidence tending to show that the motorman was negligent in not hearing the approach of the hose wagon; but we do not concur in this view, of the record. As we have already said, if the motorman’s view to the east was completely obstructed by the standing car, it was his duty to exercise care to hear the signals of approaching persons, or vehicles, and, if he failed in this respect, it would be negligence. He knew the dangerous character of the crossing, and that persons and vehicles of different kinds were liable to be passing east and west upon Walnut Street at any time, and from the condition of the street at that point he knew that the north part of it would be the most used. There were windows and a door in the vestibule of the car which he says he kept closed at the time in question. He also testified that he could not hear when the vestibule was closed. In view of this testimony and the condition existing at the time, we think there is evidence tending to show negligence in housing himself so that he did not hear what would otherwise have been plainly heard, namely, the gong and the approach of the hose wagon.
Some complaint is made of the eleventh instruction given by the court relating to the damages, but we think it did fairly direct the jury to consider the earnings of the decedent at the time of his death.
If tbe plaintiff shall elect to file in this court a