96 Iowa 702 | Iowa | 1896
I. The plaintiff is the administratrix of the estate of Howard Fish, deceased, who was a brakeman on defendant’s line of road, and was, in the month of December, 1890, in defendant’s yard at Cherokee, Iowa, while uncoupling cars, run over and killed. This action is for damage to the estate, based on averments of negligence. The particular negligence averred and relied upon is that of permitting cobble-stones to accumulate and remain on ,the track in the yard. The accident occurred in the night, when it was very dark, and while the deceased was engaged as one of a switching crew. Some cars were moving along on a track at the rate of from three to four miles an hour when he stepped in to uncouple and detach the rear car, and, in doing so, he fell, and was so injured that he died. The theory of plaintiff is that he stumbled because of cobble-stones on which he stepped, and fell. In argument, it is conceded that the yard at Cherokee is unusually well-surfaced, and in good condition for brakemen to do such work; but it appears that the company has a gravel bed near Cherokee, and that in the fall of 1890, it was taking gravel from the bed for distribution along its line. In doing this, flat cars were used, and cars or train loads of gravel would be run into the yards at Cherokee, and the gravel, in which were stones and pieces •of bowlders, would fall from the sides and ends of the cars along the tracks. At times the gravel would be cleaned off by the yard men. Appellant particularizes the evidence somewhat, as to there being a stone at the place where the injury occurred, and insists that but one stone, the size of a hen’s egg, was within two feet of where the deceased went in to uncouple the cars. We do not think that the evidence in this particular is so conclusive as that we should interfere with the finding of the jury that the fall was caused