149 Iowa 711 | Iowa | 1910
Elmer A. Little entered the employment of the defendant railway company on September 6, 1906, and continued therein until his death on or about October 10, 1907. His service was principally as brakeman on freight trains, but he was occasionally for a day or two at a time sent out as flagman on passenger trains. His freight runs as a rule were between Sylvia, 111., and Valley Junction, Iowa. At the time of his decease he was acting as rear brakeman on a freight train known as “Extra 1649 West.” The accident occurred within the limits of the station yards at Oxford, Iowa. The train reached Oxford at 9:40 o’clock p. m., and headed in upon a side track to permit the passage of an east-bound train then nearly due. The freight train was made up of thirty-nine cars, and when it came to a stop something more than one-half of its length extended eastward from the station platform. There was no switching of cars, but
Plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of the deceased, brings this action, founding his claim for the recovery of the damages on the claim that the death of his intestate was occasioned by the company’s negligence in failing to block or otherwise protect the opening between
The parties having rested, the defendant moved' for a directed verdict in its favor on the following grounds: (1) Failure of evidence to sustain the charge of negligence made against the defendant; (2) failure to show absence of contributory negligence on part of deceased; (3) entire absence of evidence as to what deceased was doing at the time of the accident and as to what caused the injury, absence of evidence that he was then engaged in the line of his duty, and no showing of circumstances indicating negligence with respect to anything causing the death of the deceased; and (4) that as a matter of law deceased should be held to have assumed the risk of injury from the unblocked guard rail. The foregoing motion was sustained generally, a directed verdict returned for defendant, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff appeals.
The ruling of the trial court implies a finding as a matter of law: (1) That the defendant was not negligent as charged; or (2) that, if negligent, the death of
The Dalton case involved a highway crossing accident occurring in the nighttime, without living witnesses of Hie conduct of deceased; and this court, while conceding that under the circumstances it was the duty of the deceased to stop, look, and listen before venturing upon the crossing, held that, in the absence of any evidence concerning his conduct in that respect,- there was a presumption that he did use due care, or, in other words, that he did stop, look, and listen. Indeed, to say that in the absence of other evidence the deceased is presumed .to have been exercising reasonable care is in the very nature of the case to presume that he did the things, or took the steps, or exercised the caution which reasonable care required him to do or observe. McMenamy v. Scullin-Gallager Co. (Mo.) 130 S. W. 359. In Baltimore Ry. Co. v. Landrigan, 191 U. S. 462 (24 Sup. Ct. 137, 48 L. Ed. 262), the deceased, a railway employee (though not a trainman), was run over and killed in the station yard in the city of Washington. No one saw the accident. In some manner he had been struck upon the track, his legs severed or crushed, and his body was found lying near at hand. The trial court instructed the jury that, in the absence of all testimony showing “whether deceased stopped, looked, and listened before going upon the track, the presumption would be that he did.” In approving this instruction the Supreme Court says: “We know of no more universal instinct than that of self-preservation — none that so insistently urges >to care against injury. It has its motives
This leads us to the inquiry (perhaps the most vital one in this discussion) whether the court can say that in stepping between the moving cars deceased was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. To so hold we must lay down the rule that under no circumstances may a brakeman on his own initiative at least, step between the cars of a moving train without debarring himself from recovery, if injured in so doing, although the injury would not have occurred but for the negligence of his employer. This must be so if we are to say deceased
Most of the cited cases refer to the coupling and uncoupling of cars while in motion, and it is said by counsel that, as this train was already made up and in motion to leave the side track, there could have been no occasion of this kind, calling the deceased into such place of danger. Even if this be true, the evidence shows that the brakeman’s duty was not limited to the mere act of coupling and uncoupling cars. It was a part of his duty
The cases cited by appellee are not inconsistent with this conclusion. In Brown v. Railroad Co., 09 Iowa, 163, there was direct evidence by living witnesses of the material facts, and no presumption could be indulged in, and it was affirmatively found by the court that there was no “emergency requiring any'such exposure to danger.” In Marlensen v. Railroad Co., 00 Iowa, 705, all the circumstances of the accident were shown in evidence, and the court found that the act of the plaintiff “was wholly unnecessary, and that, he was performing no duty” to his employer in so doing. In Hagerty v. Railroad Co., 90 Iowa, 405, the evidence “showed without conflict that the injured person was riding on the ladder without any reason for so doing.” So in all the precedents cited recovery was denied, because on the undisputed showing the parties injured or killed were acting “without reason or excuse”
To say as a matter of law that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, simply because he appears to have stepped between the cars, or to say that his administrator may not go to the jury in this case because of failure of proof to negative want of care in talcing the position of danger, is to abolish altogether the presumption of which we have spolcen. It is the very absence of all direct human testimony which calls into activity the presumption that the deceased did not risk his life recklessly or without reasonable cause. This presumption may be strengthened or weakened by other proven circumstances; but generally it is for the jury to say whether it has been overcome. The testimony to which counsel for appellee refer, which, tends to show that before leaving the side track on the night in question the train was inspected and rex>orted to be in good order, affords a legitimate, but not decisive, circumstance bearing on this question whether there Was any occasion for deceased to go between the cars; but it is not of such conclusive character as makes the question of contributory negligence one of law.
The allegation of the petition that a pile of boards had been negligently left by the defendant in proximity to the side track, and was in some manner instrumental in the injury, is without sufficient support in the record. That a pile of boards had been loft by the side of the track near the place of the accident is shown; but that it in any manner contributed to the injury of the deceased is purely a matter of conjecture.
Of the plea of assumption of risk we may say that assumption of risk arising from the master’s negligence is rarely so unequivocally established as to become a question
In our judgment, the plaintiff made a case for the jury, and the court erred in directing a verdict for defendant. A new trial must therefore be ordered. — Reversed.