182 Iowa 1076 | Iowa | 1917
One of the questions presented is in regard to the force of the presumption under Code Supplement, 1913, Section 2477-m, Paragraph 4 (d). We have decided this point in Mitchell v. Phillips Mining Co., 181 Iowa 600, and adversely to appellee’s claim. It is unnecessary to discuss that feature of this case further. It is claimed here by appellee, as it was in the other case, that the purpose of the statute was simply to shift the burden of proof to the defendant, and that the evidence introduced'on the trial was such as to overcome any presumption of negligence, and thát this is so as a matter of law. But we are of opinion that there are facts shown in this record proper to be considered by the jury, not only in aid of the presumption, but as making a ques
The evidence must be construed in the light most favorable to plaintiff. We shall attempt to state the different propositions and the evidence in regard thereto, without going too much into detail. There is a conflict at some points, but the jury, could have found therefrom that, prior to his death, deceased was employed by defendant as a coal miner, and that, at the time of the injury, he was temporarily employed as a driver; that, a few days prior to the injury, defendant’s mine foreman told deceased that he could drive a mule for a few days temporarily, rather than to lie idle waiting for a place; and that this was agreed to by the
There Avas no eyewitness to the accident. One Tom Winders, defendant’s mine foreman, was not far away, sitting across the main track. He testifies:
“When deceased came back down, he hollered, ‘Look out, Tom,’ and I looked up from my book, and the light was about the proper place it would be when the man is standing on the chain, and right then the light [of deceased] went out, and the car stopped, and the mule was 6 or 7 feet ahead of that. The mule was ahead of the car; the mule Avas betAveen him and me. When he cried, ‘Look out, Tom,’ I ran straight to him. I couldn’t tell whether the car moved in the track, but the car stopped rumbling as soon as I looked. Mr. Kelley was in front of the car, lying with his face to the north; he was lying on the right side; his feet and limbs under the car, his tAvo feet across the rail, up close to the west rail, and his head against the flange, with the flange of the wheel cut in the skull,- — the east side front wheel, — the flange of the wheel was inside the cut, and the top of his head was off.”
The body was located 7 or 8 feet south of the point where the sprags were usually taken out of the wheel. The east rail of the track was close to the rib, going north. When Winders came up, the tail chain was unhooked from
Soon after this, an examination was made, -and it was found that there were only three sprags in the car; one of the sprags had come out, and was picked up on the hill back of where the accident occurred, 500 or 600 feet north of where the body was found, and about 100 feet below the top of the hill. There is some contention as to ■ whether the sprag that came out went on through the wheel, or whether it fell out from, the side on which it was placed.
In performing his work of driving, deceased would ride on the tail chain: that is, one foot located on the chain, and the other foot on the front end of the car, one hand on the car, and the other resting on the rump of the mule. When deceased was found, the cars were not off the track, nor were they separated the full length of the coupling, — not jammed together — a little o'pening between, — indicating, according to the testimony, that the cars were not going fast. Winders says that, as soon as deceased “hollered,” his light went out, and the car stopped. It is the habit of a mule to stop when the driver’s light goes out. There is evidence that, when the driver falls or leaves the car, or takes his foot off the tail chain, the hook is likely to become unhooked. There was one link and hook on this drawbar; the drawbar extended out from the front end of the car about three inches; and on the end of that is where the link was fastened on the drawbar. Some of the drivers put the hook of the tail chain into the link, and others in the hole in the drawbar. It is not shown which of these methods was used at the time deceased was hurt. The tail chains
It should have been said that, at the bottom of the grade, was the mouth of an abandoned room, where the driver ordinarily stepped off his loaded cars to remove the sprags, the mouth of the old room affording him space for that purpose. Immediately beyond this old room, and at the corner thereof, going upward, on the same side of the haulage way, is where the track was located, close to the rib. Defendant’s witnesses say that one could not pass between the loaded cars and the rib without being required to edge through. Ordinarily, deceased would expect to stop his loads at- the old room mouth, but in the instant case, he did not stop at that point, but went on past to the narrower place. He had come down a steep grade; there was blood up on the side of the rib. As said, there was a roll, or uneven place, in the roof, under which deceased had passed; from the position in which deceased was-riding on the tail chain and down the grade, he may have struck his head against the uneven place in the roof, and lost his balance, and struck his head against the rib close to the car. Under the record, it could have so happened. Negligence
Another circumstance relied upon by appellant is that defendant supplied deceased with dangerous instrumentalities, in the way of loose links where the tail chain was required to be placed in hauling the cars, and that deceased may have been injured by reason thereof. Time, it is not shown by the record just what method deceased was employing in regard to this, but, without going into the evidence, we think this was a matter proper to be considered by the jury. We. must keep in mind all the time that the burden is on the defendant to show due care.
Without discussing the evidence and claims more in detail, it is our conclusion, from the entire record, that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. The judgment is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in harmony with this opinion.— Reversed.