82 Iowa 249 | Iowa | 1891
I, The questions presented in the record may be resolved into the inquiry whether the
On and for two months prior to October 18, 1888, T. Gr. Klepper, Jr., then,aged twenty-two years, was in the employ of the defendant as a brakeman on freight trains, which service was the extent of his experience in railroad work. For about two months prior to October 18, 1888, he was serving as front brakeman on freight trains running between Belle Plaine east and Boone west, having run into Boone on train number 19 three or four times. On that date he arrived at Boone on train number 19, from the east, at about ten o’clock at night, in the caboose in which train passengers were being carried. The track upon which the cabooses stood when not in use was in defendant’s yard
The only charge of negligence submitted to the jury was “the alleged ground that the practice or custom of the defendant had been to start the car on which Klep-per was riding cast at the depot at Boone, and that at the time of the alleged injury said car was, without notice or warning to said Klepper, started west instead of east.” The testimony shows without conflict that ordinarily there was no occasion for moving the car west; that it was usually moved east and placed upon
It seems to us to require neither discussion nor citations to show that the defendant owed no duty to Klepper to notify him of dangers which, by the exercise of ordinary care, he could have known.- We quote the following from Beach on Contributory Negligence (secs. 133, 138) as a correct statement of the law: “That wherever the employe’s means of information are equal to or greater than those of his employer, the employer will be excused, from giving warning, and will not be liable in case of injury from a defect of that sort.” “As we have seen it to be the duty of the master to point out' such dangers as are not patent, so it is the duty of the employe to go about this work with his eyes open. He may not wait to be told, but must act affirmatively. He must take ordinary care to learn the dangers which are likely to beset him in the service. * * * He must not go blindly and heedlessly to his work when there is danger.” Russell v. Tillotson, 140 Mass. 201; 4 N. E. Rep. 231; Taylor v. Mfg. Co., 140 Mass. 150 ; 3 N. E. Rep. 21; Hathaway v. Railroad, 51 Mich. 253 ; 16 N. W. Rep. 634. If the fact that the car was being moved west instead of east could have been known to Mr. Klepper by the exercise of ordinary care, then the defendant was under no duty to notify him. That by looking he ,could readily have known which way the car was moving, is shown by the testimony without conflict. Two persons, who with lighted lanterns stood upon the car platform from which Mr. Klepper stepped, agreed in saying that the direction in
II. There is not only an entire absence of testimony showing care on Mr. Klepper’s part, but it
III. The appellee contends that these questions of negligence were for the jury to determine, and that the court could not say, as a matter of law, that the defendant was not negligent as charged, nor that Mr. Klepper had not used ordinary care. It has been uniformly held by this court that where there is no evidence on behalf of a party having the burden of proof as to the issues, or where essential or integral elements of his cause of action or defense are wholly without proof, or when the facts are established without conflict, which as a matter of law will defeat the right to recover, the court should, upon motion, take the case from the jury. Conners v. Railroad, 74 Iowa, 383; Powers v. Railroad, 45 Iowa, 652 ; Murphy v. Railroad, 45 Iowa, 661, and cases cited therein. We think there was no testimony to sustain the charge of negligence against the defendant; nor to show care on the part of the injured party. As these views fully dispose of the case, we need not notice the question made as to the amount of the verdict.
The judgment of the district court is keveesed