133 Iowa 699 | Iowa | 1907
On the 1st day of February 1904, the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a mnle driver in its mine. The entry in which he was driving when he received the injury complained of contained two tracks :— one of which was commonly used for the passage of loaded cars to the shaft, and the other for the passage of empties back into the mine. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was going south in this entry with some empty cars drawn by a mule, and was standing with one foot on the' bumper of the forward car, and the other on the tail chain between the mule and the car. At the place where he was injured, there was an ascending grade into the mine, and the roof thereof was supported at this point, and for some distance on each, side thereof, by props placed between the two tracks. At this particular time a trip of eighteen loaded cars was going north toward the shaft and, just before the trip met the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s mule swerved from the track on which he was traveling to the left between a couple of the props and was struck by the loaded cars, and thrown over against one of the props, knocking it from its place. The removal of this prop caused slate to fall from the roof of the entry upon the plaintiff, inflicting the injury of which he complains. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant was negligent in not having propped the entry at this point with cross-timbers, and in placing the props between the tracks as they did, without securely fastening them at the top and bottom; and, further, in not providing lights for the entry at the point where the plaintiff was injured. In its answer, the defendant alleged that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; that his injury was due to the negligence of his co-employé, and that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the condition of the entry when he entered the defendant’s employment.
But, if this were not so, the jury were justified in finding that the roof of the entry at the point in question was insecurely supported by the prop in question, and that it was negligence on the part of the defendant in placing these props between the two tracks without securely fastening them at both ends, so that they could not be displaced by such a collision. And it is a familiar rule that the mere fact that some other caus'es operated with the negligence of the defendant to produce the injury complained of does not relieve the defendant from liability. The original wrong of the defendant concurring with some other causes, and
The appellant contends that instructions asked by it to the effect that it was its duty to use reasonable care to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to work should have been given, and-urges that while the instruction given by the court on the degree of care required by the appellant was abstractly correct, it should have been more particularly applied to the facts in this case. We think the jury was sufficiently instructed on this branch of the case, and that no reversal should be had because of the court’s failure in the respect indicated.
Witnesses may be equally entitled to credit in so far as their being truthful is concerned, and still the testimony given by such witnesses may not be of equal value as proof of certain facts although the circumstances may be equally consistent with the testimony of each, for the reason that the intelligence of such witnesses and their means of observation may be entirely different. Their memories may not be of equal strength, and many other elements may appear to the jury which would have weight in determining the value of the testimony of each witness.; in other words, while witnesses may be equally worthy of belief, the value which is ultimately to be placed upon the testimony of each witness can alone be determined by the jury, and, when a
The appellee in support of the instruction relies upon Indianapolis St. Ry. Co. v. Schmidt, 163 Ind. 360 (71 N. E. 201). In that case the jury was told “ that if all other thinge were exactly equal in all respects, the witnesses of equal intelligence and credibility, having equal opportunities of knowledge, testifying with equal candor, intelligence, and fairness, the weight of the evidence under such circumstances should be considered to be on the side having the greater number of witnesses.” In discussing the instruction, the court said: “ If such a remarkable situation of exact equipoise in the character, credibility, knowledge, candor, intelligence, and fairness of the witnesses, as is described in this instruction, could by any possibility exist,
Some complaints are made of other instructions, and of other matters occurring on the trial, but we find nothing further demanding specific consideration. The appellant’s motion to strike from the files appellee’s additional abstract of record, and to tax to the appellee the cost of printing the same, was submitted with the case, and it is overruled.
Nor the error in the instructions, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.