Enix v. Iowa Central Railway Co.

111 Iowa 748 | Iowa | 1900

Sherwin, J.

Complaint is made of the reception of testimony tending to prove the cost of a building alleged to be of different size and shape from the one burned. So far as the record before us shows, no objection was made to this testimony, and the one now presented cannot be considered. A witness, who was an insurance agent, and adjuster of losses by fire, testified, over the defendant’s objection, as to the cost of a building similar to the one burned. His testimony was based upon what was called an “adjuster’s rule,” which figures the, cost of a building at so much per cubic foot of space in the building above the foundation. The evidence of carpenters tended to show that the rule under which this witness made his estimate was approximately correct, — so determined by their own experience. The evidence was properly admitted. On the cross-examination of defendant’s experts on the cost of buildings, the plaintiff was permitted to ask questions as to the cost of a building of a different size and shape from the one testified to in chief. There was no error in this. The plaintiff, in the first place, was not bound to confine his inquiries to the exact dimensions of the building under consideration on direct examination of the witness; and, in the second place, because there was testimony in the record tending to support the theory of the cross-examination; and, further, the verdict itself clearly indicates that no possible prejudice could have resulted from the cross-examination complained of, if not correct. The record does not show that the witness G. W. Stamm testified as claimed by counsel in argument, and we discover nothing in the testimony he did give which was prejudicial to the defendant.

The defendant very urgently presses its claim that a new trial should have been granted because of language used by counsel for the plaintiff in presenting the case to the jury. The statement was made and repeated that the defendant’s engines were old fire traps. There was no direct testimony on either side of the case as to the condition of any of the defendant’s engines, nor as to the means used to arrest sparks on the engine supposed to have set the fire in question. The burned building was situated 150 feet from the nearest point on the railroad track. The issue was squarely made that the fire was the result of a defective chimney, and was not caused by defendant’s engine. There was also testimony tending to show that other fires had been set by defendant’s passing trains. In view of the whole record, we reach the conclusion that the statement was not such as to require a reversal of the case. The remark of the trial court, in ruling upon an objec*750tion to this language, that he thought it not objectionable, and that counsel had a right to call them “fire traps,” could not well have been understood by the jury as meaning anything more than that it was proper comment under the evidence. As the language itself was not, in our judgment, prejudicial, we think the remark of the court did not make it so, or influence the jury to the prejudice of the defendant. The verdict, both as to the cause of the fire and as to the value of the house, finds ample support in the eviderice, and the case is affirmed.

Granger, C. J., not sitting.
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