165 Iowa 181 | Iowa | 1913
I. The plaintiff, William Miller, was in .1910 in the employ of the defendant as a yardman about its factory and had been so employed for a period of four or five weeks prior to the time of receiving the injuries complained of in the action, which were sustained by him on September 22d. He was a man thirty-four years of age and, upon entering the employ of the defendant, gave his occupation as an engineer. He had previously been employed in various ways, sometimes running a stationary engine, did some carpenter work, assisted in threshing and like labor, without regular occupation or employment in any particular line.
On the 22d of September, 1910, while engaged in piling some structural steel bars, known as angle irons, which work he was directed by one Noble to perform in connection with another employee of the defendant', the pile of iron fell, crushing plaintiff’s leg and occasioning to him severe injuries. Negligence of defendant is charged as follows: (1) In not having a proper and suitable place to pile the beams and in requiring them to be piled upon a rough and uneven surface, which was not solid or permanent. (2) In furnishing a base upon which to pile the angle irons which was insufficient for the purpose. (3) In not permitting the plaintiff and his co-employee to pile the same in a manner which would be solid and in furnishing improper pieces of boards for crosspieces. (4) In failing to furnish to plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe material with which to perform the duty assigned to him and his co-employee. (5) In failing to have a prescribed method or rule which would be reasonably safe in piling the angle irons. The defendant denies negligence, pleads contributory negligence of the plaintiff and the assumption of the risk. At the conclusion of the evidence
"We must therefore somewhat in detail set out the evidence to determine the correctness of the ruling of the trial court.
The claim of the appellant is that the support or ground upon which such timbers rested, especially at the southwest, was of such nature as to be unsafe and unfitted as a base upon which to build heavy piles of iron. We have considered carefully the evidence bearing upon this phase of the case; and while it tends to show that after a rain there was a nearby spot or place where the water for a time remained in a little pool, such is not by the evidence shown to have affected the situation at the time of the injury, nor can we find in the evidence that which would warrant the inference that such alleged condition was a contributing cause to the accident.
Upon the whole case we think the ruling of the trial court was correct, and it is Affirmed.