174 Iowa 498 | Iowa | 1916
The second specification was not submitted to the jury, but the others were, resulting in the verdict hitherto stated.
II. Defendant’s mine is what is called a drift one, the shaft entering at or near the bottom of a hill, and, from this main one, which runs into the hill, several entryways branch off into rooms. At the time of the accident, the working face of the mine was something like 1,400 feet from the opening of the shaft or entryway. The mine and the entries were lighted by electricity. The main shaft or entryway was from 10 to 14 feet wide and about 9 feet high. A ventilating system was installed, and an air tube extended into the main entry something like 12 feet, where a fan was placed in a box, this box being near the top of the entry. At the mouth of the entry, a framework was constructed, with a door in this frame. This door was hung upon heavy hinges attached to the south side or southeast wall, and the door itself was about 6 feet wide and 6 feet 6 inches in height. It was constructed of inch boards nailed together diagonally. It opened but one way, and, when opened, swung into the mine and rested against the southeast wall or rib. There was a handgrip upon it, but it had no latch. It was also equipped with a half-inch rope attached to the upper north corner of the door, and this rope from there was carried over pulleys for something like 20 feet along the south side of the rib back into the mine. This was for the purpose of opening the door without using the handle or grip thereon. The forcing of the air into the mine kept the door closed, and it is claimed that for this
In this connection, we may also dispose of a complaint made of the instructions on proximate cause. We have examined them in the light of the argument and find no error.
The defendant asked two instructions to the effect that, if the injury would not have occurred save for the voluntary act of plaintiff’s intervening between the negligent acts of the defendant and the injury, then defendant’s negligence, if any, was not the proximate cause of the injury, and no recovery could be had. These instructions were properly refused. In the form asked, they were misleading, and confused negligence and contributory negligence in such a way as to mislead. Of course, it must be shown that, but for defendant’s negligence in the respects charged, the accident would not have happened, and the doctrine of intervening cause has primarily no reference to the conduct of the plaintiff, but to some other responsible agency for which the defendant was not responsible, intervening between defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s injury, without which the accident would not have happened. Even in such cases, this intervening human agency may not relieve a negligent defendant;
VII. The other instructions complained of have reference to contributory negligence. The first one reads as follows:
“9. You are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff left a place of safety, and while there was not time for him to open*509 the door in the manner he attempted to open the same before the mule and cars would have so far advanced as to put him in danger of injury, and that without first looking and ascertaining the position of the advancing mule and cars, he voluntarily put himself in a position where he could be injured in consequence of the advancing mule and cars, there can be no recovery on behalf of the plaintiff, and your verdict should be for the defendant. However, this would not be true if you find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the place which the plaintiff left when the rope broke was not a place of safety but was a place of danger, or if you find that, from the circumstances as they then appeared to plaintiff that he, acting as a reasonably prudent and careful man, thought that the position was one of peril and danger to him.
“9%. If in this case the jury finds that the plaintiff was in a position near the rib of the mine entry where he was not in danger, had he remained in such position, and while there was fully aware of, and knew the existence of all of those matters which he charges now to be negligence, and with such knowledge voluntarily stepped between the rails of the track in said entry where he was injured, such voluntary action on the part of the plaintiff would prevent his recovery in this case, and your verdict, if you so find the facts to be, should be for the defendant. However, this would not be true if you find that the position the plaintiff was in nea/r the rib of the mine entry when the rope broke was a place of peril and danger to him, and that he was in danger of being injured, had he remained in such position, or if you find that, from the circumstances as they then appeared to him, acting as a reasonably prudent and careful man, he supposed such place to be a place of danger and peril to him.
“12. It is claimed by the plaintiff in this ease that just prior to the happening of the accident which resulted in his injuries, and as the mule and train of cars of which he was in charge approached the door to the entrance of the mine,*510 and when he pulled the rope for the purpose of opening said door, that the rope broke and the door did not open, and that the plaintiff was then confronted with a sudden and imminent danger and peril to himself, and that such emergency was brought about by the alleged negligence of the defendant, and without negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and that in running ahead to open said door before they should reach it, he was seeking to avoid danger and peril and to obtain safety for himself and for the mule and train of ears of which he was in charge. With regard to such claim you are instructed that if you find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that one of the specific charges of negligence made by the plaintiff, and submitted in these instructions, was the proximate cause of placing the plaintiff, at the time and place charged, in a place of danger and peril, then in such emergency you are instructed'that the plaintiff was not required, under the law, to act with the same deliberation and foresight that might be expected of him under ordinary circumstances, but that all the law requires of a servant acting in an emergency such as above described is that he act with ordinary and reasonable care, in the light of the circumstances as they appeared to him at the time, and the fact, if it be a fact, that he did not take the safest course or best course which he could hme taken in such emergency, will not authorize you in finding that he was guilty of contributory negligence in so doing.”
The matter of choice of perils wa§ embodied in the twelfth instruction, and that instruction is not challenged save as to the final clause. As we read this instruction, it does nothing more than to announce the rule already stated in this opinion: that, if one is placed in sudden and imminent peril, and is confronted with an emergency which may be met in two or more different ways, he is not to be held guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law, simply because he chose the most hazardous way of doing his work. The jury was, by this very instruction, directed to the question as to whether or not plaintiff exercised reasonable care and prudence in making his choice. In other instructions, they were told that, if plaintiff did not exercise this degree of care, he could not recover. We see no prejudicial error in any of the instructions.