Lead Opinion
— The defendant maintains and operates in Cedar Rapids an electrical street car line, and on First avenue, running east and west, it has a double track; the trolley wires being supported by iron posts set in a row about 150 feet apart between the two tracks. On July 19, 1908, as one of the cars of the defendant coming from the east on the north line of track along said avenue approached the west side of First Street West, H. A. ■Sturdevant, plaintiff’s intestate, coming from the south along the west side of First Street West, attempted, while the car was still in rapid motion, to enter it by the front vestibule door on the south or left-hand side of the car, the door at that time being open, and after he had mounted the step, but before he had entered the vestibule, he was carried by the motion of the car against an iron trolley post situated a few feet west of the sidewalk and received injuries from which he died. The negligence of the defendant alleged in plaintiff’s amended and substituted petition was that it carelessly and negligently constructed its tracks so near the line of trolley poles as to render the act of getting on and off its cars at the place where
We have not attempted to state in further detail the plaintiff’s allegations of negligence, for the reason that no complaint is made of the failure of the court in its statement to the jury of the issues to present to the jury all the issues raised by the pleadings.
I. Certain rulings of the court in the admission or rejection of evidence are complained of, and these may first be briefly noticed.
But however that discretion may have been exercised in the present instance, whether reasonably or not, is immaterial, for on subsequent examination by defendant’s counsel it appeared that the witness had gone to the place on the preceding day with counsel for plaintiff, and had seen the measurements of the distance to which he referred actually made. No possible prejudice could have resulted from the ruling complained of.
In Coates v. Burlington, C. R. & N. R. Co.,
Referring now to decisions in other states bearing upon the question before us, we find that rules have been held admissible, not only where the action is by an employee who may be presumed, on account of his relations to the company, to have had knowledge of rules made for his protection, and to have relied upon the observance of such rules in the conduct of the company’s business, Meyers v. San Pedro, L. A. & S. L. R. Co.,
¡But by what we regard as the decided weight of authority, as well as in accordance with sound reasoning, it has been held that in cases of injury to persons who are not charged with the knowledge of the company’s rules, and who have not acted in reliance thereon, the rules of the company for the regulation of the conduct of its employees are not admissible in evidence for the purpose of showing that the company was liable on account of the violation of such rules as constituting negligence. Thus in Alabama G. S. R. Co. v. Clark,
It must be conceded, however, that in Stevens v. Boston Elevated R. Co.,
In Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. State, Use Chambers,
What has been said with reference to the last two preceding cases cited is applicable to the cases of Georgia R. R. v. Williams,
That the rule rejected in the case before us was wholly immaterial, and could have been of no assistance to the plaintiff in enabling him to make out a case, is apparent from the fact that, so far as applicable to the case before the court, it simply required the motorman to run his car slowly and with great care over crossings, holding the car well in hand, and applying only such amount of power as might be necessary for its proper propulsion. If plaintiff was entitled to recover at all, such recovery was necessarily predicated on the duty of the defendant toward plaintiff as a passenger; that is, toward one who, for the purpose of being transported on the car as a passenger, was attempting to enter it. But, if the rule could be construed as requiring under the circumstances a higher degree of care in operating the car over the crossing than that required by law, then, as indicated in .the cases cited and referred to by Judge Thompson, it was plainly not admissible. It would be unreasonable to say that such a company as the defendant can not prescribe rules for the conduct of its employees without thereby being held to an admission that the failure to. observe such rules would be negligence, attributable to it in its relations to other-persons, as well as a breach of obligation on the part of the employee to the employer. If such rules are to be so construed, then it would be plainly against the interests of the company to make any rules whatever for fear they could be construed into admission of negligence when violated; whereas, it is equally plain that the company has an interest with reference to the management of the details of its business in prescribing specifically what its employees should do under particular circumstances. Such requirements may well'be important in regard to the safety of the company’s property and the expedition required in the
In conclusion it is sufficient to say that having in the case of Hart v. Cedar Rapids & Marion City R. Co., supra,
The decision of the trial court is therefore — Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — If the majority had been content to place the decision upon the ground that no prejudice resulted from the exclusion of defendant’s rules, I would not object to the conclusion reached. But, as the opinion proceeds upon the theory that such rules are inadmissible in negligence cases, I must withhold my concurrence. The effect of the decision will be to hold that, if such rules be admitted, prejudice will be presumed, and every subsequent case must be reversed where such rules are admitted in evidence. I do not think this doctrine is sound in principle, or supported by the weight of authority. I believe that such rules as are here involved are promulgated for the safety, not only of passengers, but of all persons rightfully on the streets, and that they are in the nature of an admission by the defendant of the degree of care required for the protection of these persons. If they require more than the law would exact, that matter can easily be covered by instructions. But in the majority of instances, and especially in this case, the rule did not require anything more than the law imposes. My conclusions find support in Railroad Co. v. Altemeier,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — I fully concur in the dissent expressed by Mr. Justice Deemer. I take issue upon the proposition that this court has ever before directly or indirectly committed itself to the doctrino of the majority opinion. Mo^re than that, but two courts of last resort in this country — the courts of Alabama and Minnesota — have • ever shown any leaning in that direction. In the former case cited by the majority the question is passed upon in a brief dogmatic or perfunctory way without citation of authority. In the latter case the opinion is founded solely upon the manifestly unsound assumption that the rules in question were adopted to prescribe the duty of the motorman to the company alone and not to the public, and their disregard by the motorman would be no evidence of negligence in an action by a third person. The same 'sort of reasoning would exclude the evidence in an action brought by an injured employee, but the majority concede, as do all the cases, that the evidence is admissible in an action of that nature. On the other hand, the Supreme courts of Ohio, Massachusetts, Maryland, Illinois, and Georgia have distinctly held the evidence competent, as is pointed out in the dissent of Deemer, J., and the logical force of the reasoning by which .their views are upheld is in my judgment irresistible. I shall not take the time to discuss the cases, except to say that our own decisions on which the majority seem to rely are not in point upon the question before us. The Burg case was an action by a tres
The judgment below ought to be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
