136 Iowa 302 | Iowa | 1907
Prior to and on July 28, 1903, defendant, a corporation owned and was operating a line of elevators ; one of which was at Hanna, a small station on the line of the Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway. One Fox was in its employ in connection with the last-named elevator. On or about July 25, 1903, defendant was informed that Fox was short some oats, and on or about the 27th of that month one Granger, defendant’s superintendent, went to investigate the shortage. When Granger appeared Fox notified him that he had discovered some oats in a shipping bin of the elevator which he did not know about, and Granger notified him (Fox) that these must be weighed and again placed in the elevator, directing Fox to procure a team to -haul the oats. Thereupon Fox arranged with the father of plaintiff’s intestate for a man and a team to appear at the elevator next morning. When the morning came, Emil' Meier, the deceased, a boy of a little over sixteen years of age, appeared with a team, and undertook the work of transferring the oats. The boy leveled the oats in the wagon and drove the
IV. The seventh instruction, which reads as follows, is complained -of:
g. Negligence: instruction. One of the charges of negligence on 'the part of the defendant is that the defendant failed to give the said Emil Meier any caution, warning, or instruction as to the dangers or hazards of the place where he was set to work, or the work he was required to do. In relation to 'this matter, you are told that it is the duty of a master to use reasonable and ordinary efforts to warn or instruct young or inexperienced servants respecting the danger, if any, of obeying directions given to such servant, whenever obedience to such orders or directions will expose such servant to danger of injury from any cause which is known, or which would, in the exercise of ordinary care, be known, to the master, whenever the master knows, or, in the exercise of ordinary care, should know, that the servant, because of youth or inexperience, is not aware of the danger; and providing the danger is not known, or open and obvious, so that in the exercise of ordinary care the servant would be aware of such danger. As applied to this case, if you find from the evidence that the defendant directed Emil Meier to go into the bin where he met his death, and if you further find from the evidence that the same was a dangerous place, and going into the bin was a dangerous undertaking, and if you further find from the evidence that the defendant, through his agents or employes in charge of the work, knew that Meier was about to go into the bin, then you are told that it was the duty of the agents in charge of the work to notify and warn Meier of the dangers which, in the exercise of ordinary care, they either knew, or should have known, he was about to encounter. However, if you should find from, the evidence that the defendant, through its agents in charge, directed Meier to go into the bin, yet if you should find from the evidence that at the time Meier went into the bin he knew the condition thereof, or if you should find from the evidence that the dangers he did encounter were open or obvious, so that in the exercise of ordinary care Meier could be aware of the dangers he was about to encounter, then the defendant would not be liable for the injuries sustained, or for the death of Meier.
The testimony showed that the place was dark, and that plaintiffs intestate had never been in it before. In such cases thé doctrine of assumption of risk has a very narrow application. Cote v. Lawrence Co., 178 Mass. 295 (59 N. E. 656). In any event the doctrine of assumption of risk was for the jury. The same may be said of the question of contributory negligence.
The case was peculiarly one for the jury, and with its finding we shall not interfere. The judgment must therefore be, and it is, affirmed.