188 Iowa 642 | Iowa | 1920
The argument for plaintiff is that the lease held by the Standard Oil Company required it to keep its supply house painted, and that, therefore, the plaintiff was performing for his employer the requirement imposed by the defendant upon its lessee. It is argued, therefore, that the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty of lookout and discovery. Whether, if this premise were good, such conclusion would follow, we need not determine. The actual provisions of the lease thus relied on by plaintiff were as follows:
“All buildings and structures are to be ‘constructed of such material and in such manner as to be satisfactory to lessor.’
“All buildings and the leased premises are to be kept in a neat and orderly condition; the bwildmgs to be painted as often as necessary; the color to be designated by the lessor.”
The plaintiff was not engaged in painting the buildings.
Such lease contained, also, the following provision:
“No building, structure or obstruction shall be erected or placed nearer than six (6) feet of the nearest rail of any track.”
The fence line was six feet from the tracks. The. only reason the plaintiff had for putting the foot of his ladder against the defendant’s railroad was that it was more convenient for him to do so than to place the same inside the fence. The ground inside the fence was more uneven than that outside. The ladder would thereby be rendered less
The argument of the plaintiff centers, in the main, upon two general propositions:
(1) That the question of his contributory negligence was for the jury.
(2) That the question of the negligence of the defendant under the doctrine of last clear chance was for the jury.
In proof of his own freedom from contributory negligence, he testified that he watched and listened constantly for an approaching train, and saw none. And yet the undisputed testimony of his own witnesses, even including himself, is that, if he had looked, he must have seen the train, and, if he had listened, he must have heard it. He argues that the trainmen could have seen him for a distance of three quarters of a mile, and that, therefore, the defendant is liable, under the doctrine of last,clear chance. But he could have seen- the train mo-re readily than the trainmen could have seen him. If he had seen the train half a mile away, he would have known that he was in imminent danger. Without seeing the train, he knew every moment that he was in imminent danger; whereas, if the trainmen half a mile away had seen him, they would simply have seen him at work within the lines of the enclosure of the Standard Oil Company. They would not necessarily, or even probably, see that his ladder projected into the near vicinity of the track. His presence at such place, therefore, would not attract their observation, or disclose to them his peril. Indeed, his actual position in their line of vision was such as to negative any suggestion of peril. Only the discovery of the ladder itself and the extent of its encroachment" upon the right of way could disclose to the trainmen the peril of plaintiff’s position.
We have carefully read the evidence in the record, and