98 Iowa 569 | Iowa | 1895
Lead Opinion
I. Plaintiff was in the years 1890 and 1891, the owner of a farm lying about one-half mile north and east of defendant’s station called “Earling,” in Shelby county, Iowa. The railroad track ran through said farm from northeast to southwest. On the south and east side of defendant’s line of railway, and adjoining its right of way, plaintiff had a pasture wherein the stock claimed to have been killed, was kept. There was a gate in the, company’s right of way fence, which opened from said pasture into the right of way. The petition charges that about September 15, 1890, the defendant, by one of its trains, killed a calf belonging to plaintiff; that about April 20, 1891, defendant, by its section hands, willfully and negligently caused the death of another calf, the property of plaintiff, by driving it off the right of way (upon which it had escaped by reason of negligent fencing) upon a bridge upon said right of way; and charges that at the same time and place they injured and damaged another calf; that on June 4, 1891, at the same place, and by the same means, it killed a two-year old filly, the property of plaintiff, also a yearling colt; that at the same time and place defendant
Rehearing
Supplemental Opinion on Re-hearing.
Counsel for appellee contends that the opinion heretofore filed in- this case (65 N. W. Rep. 814) gives no force and effect to the presumptions as to the negligence of the defendant which the statute, upon the proof of certain facts, raises in favor of the plaintiff. Code, section 1289. The holding, in effect, was that the statutory presumptions referred to had been fully overcome by other evidence in the case, which is fully set forth in the opinion. While the provisions of the statute were not discussed in the opinion, a careful reading of it, in the light of the evidence set forth therein, makes it clear that the holding is in no way in conflict with Manwell v. Railway Co., 80 Iowa, 666 (45 N. W. Rep. 568), or other cases. The petition for a re-hearing is overruled, and the judgment below ÍS REVERSED.