Assume there may be debate over what deduction might rightly be drawn by a jury from this evidence; yet the evi dence does exist. This record is not one wherein-there is no evidence to support a claim that there was this roughness and swaying, and the question is,- whether their existence made it for the jury whether these conditions caused decedent to fall from the train. . ■.
2-a
We are justified in saying that, on the whole case, appellee does not so much question that, under the testimony, it might be true that decedent came to his death as the plaintiff claims, but takes the position that this is no more рrobable or possible than that decedent might have been stricken by an attack of heart trouble, vertigo, and the like, and thus have come to fall from the train. Again, appellee does not so much urge it was impossible for the death to have resulted from contact with the post, but insists, rather, -that that is no more possible than that the man was already dead when he fell frоm the train, because of something not due to the negligence of defendant. In other words, the main defense of the judgment below is that the testimony was in equipoise, as matter of law.
The law on the point is well settled: Undoubtedly^ it is not enough there is a mere possibility that, the injury is
The true test is well stated in Schoepper v. Hancock Chemical Co.,
It is said in Lunde v. Cudahy,
. The facts in Kansas City So. R. Co. v. Leslie,
2-b
Plain as all this seems to be, the parties conflict sharply on how it bears upon their case. The appellant сontends that, if the jury can reasonably And from the evidence that the negligence of defendant furnished cause adequate to produce the injury suffered, there is a case for the jury. The appellee construes our decisions that the plaintiff must fail where the testimony on liability is in equipoise, to mean that, if the trial court or this court are of opinion the testimony is in equipoise, and reach such conclusion because the injury is possible upon some theory other than the one advanced by plaintiff, and such other possible cause is not excluded, then there is a case for a directed verdict. If this be so, then, though the jury may reasonably find that a shot fined by the defendant caused death, a verdict must be directed for the defendant, if, in the оpinion of the court, it is possible that someone other than defendant fired the shot. We do not believe the rule is as appellee contends. When a verdict has been directed, the appellate court, in reviewing that action, and in passing upon what the evidence showed, or what might legitimately be inferred from it, does not deal with what the trial court or the Suprеme Court might infer, but inquires whether the jury, as reasonable and intelligent men, might legitimately conclude, from the proofs offered, .that the accident occurred in the manner alleged by the plaintiff. Lunde v. Cudahy,
We shall not stop to set out all the circumstances that lead us to this conclusion. They are numerous. No one or more of them, nor many taken together, might be at аll conclusive; but with no proof whereon to base the theory advanced by defendant, all taken together, though not conclusive, made it a question for the jury whether or not de cedent had come to his death as the petition charges — that is, that the defective roadbed so swayed' the engine upon which tlie decedent was, in the performance of his duty, as that hе was thrown off and killed, by coming in violent contact with a post placed by defendant.
We think freedom from contributory negligence was for the jury. . .
' Assumption of risk was held to be for a jury where the injury cáme from an overhead structure. See Coles v. Union Terminal R. Co.,
Can it be said decedent assumed the risk of being thrown against the post which defendant had placed too near the track? If so, then, though it were conceded that some wrong of the defendant had thrown decedent from the
We are of opinion the cause must be remanded for trial by jury. — Reversed and remanded.
