146 Iowa 588 | Iowa | 1909
At the time of the accident, January 20, 1898, the -defendant company was operating a line of railway in the then territory of Oklahoma, and plaintiff was there in its service as a locomotive fireman, when he claims to have been injured in the following manner: He alleges that as the freight train on which he was employed was approaching the station at Mineo, about daylight in the morning, he went out upon the top of the tender in the discharge of his ordinary duty to assist in supplying the engine with water. At -this time, and with
He further alleges that for * a considerable distance in approaching Mineo from the direction in which the train was moving there is a steep descending grade, which, before entering the yard, changes to an ascending grade, causing a depression or sag in passing over which car couplings were liable to be disconnected, by reason of all which said track was not constructed or maintained in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the employees operating trains thereon. Other charges of negligence are stated in the petition, but they do not appear to be involved in this appeal, and we shall not consider them. The answer puts in issue all the allegations of the petition, and pleads assumption of risk by the plaintiff. .At the close of the testimony the defendant moved for a directed verdict in its favor on grounds which may be stated as follows: (1) There is no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant with respect to the construction or condition of its track. (2) There is no negligence shown on the part of defendant with respect to the couplers with
This cause was before us in Gordon v. Railroad Co., 129 Iowa, 747, where we reversed an order sustaining a demurrer to the petition which we found to state a good cause of action, and, so far as the decision there rendered is applicable to questions' arising on this appeal, it must be regarded as decisive of the law. Before the cause came on for the second hearing, Gordon died, and his administratrix has been substituted as plaintiff.
The engineer testifies: “The engine was pushed forward by the concussion two car lengths, and I shut the air as soon as I could.” And, while he says that the concussion might have been caused by the “running up of the slack,” he further says: “My attention was not called to the- fact that the caboose was knocked off its center till we got to Chickasha. We discovered it there. The shock was greater than the ordinary movement of trains. It was the most severe shock I had ever experienced in oper-' ations of that character at that time.” This witness does
In the face of this record, it will not do to say that there is no evidence of the parting of the train, or that, if it did separate, there is no evidence that plaintiff’s fall from the tender was caused by a collision between the two sections. Plaintiff swears that the train was broken, that 1 he saw the space between the sections, and that the rear section appeared to be following in the direction of the front section. True, he says his view was brief, almost instantaneous, but the message of a visible object through the eye to the brain requires hardly a measurable space of time. The witness was apparently in a place to see and know something of the matter, and to this extent at least his evidence is direct, and not circumstantial. In so testifying he either commits perjury, or, being honest and truthful, he is mistaken, and did not see what he says he saw, or he tells the facts, as they actually occurred before his eyes. It is unnecessary to stop here to argue that these questions are for the jury alone to answer.
Moreover, if his testimony be true that he had slowed down the 'train to such a degree that, when within two or three car lengths of the tank, he saw he would come to a stop before reaching it, and he had to let off the air brakes in order to make this short distance, it would seem very evident that the momentum acquired by the cars at the rear must have been practically exhausted, and the renewed momentum created in moving an additional two or three car lengths is wholly insufficient to explain the unusually violent concussion which followed. Counsel say that, after the accident, the train was found fully coupled together, and that this fact conclusively demonstrates the plaintiff’s mistake. But the fact thus relied upon is not itself sustained by such an array of evidence that we can say it is conclusively established, and, if established, it is not shown to conclusively negative the plaintiff’s assertion that the train was broken in two at the time he says it was. The only evidence with respect to this feature of the controversy is that of the engineer, who says that, after the accident, “we pulled the train up and put it on the side track. So far as I know, the cars were all coupled up at that time. I did not make any movement for the purpose of coupling. If any of the cars had been uncoupled, it would have been necessary to have made
The necessary conclusion from the foregoing discussion is that the district court erred in directing a verdict against the plaintiff, and the judgment appealed from is therefore reversed.