122 Iowa 237 | Iowa | 1904
The defendant owns, a line of railway which occupies a part of Leech street, in Sioux City. Leech street runs east and west, and is crossed at right angles by Chambers street. Approaching from the east in the direction of Chambers street, the track curves to the south, running near the curb line, and at a point several hundred feet west of the Chambers street crossing it enters an arched, doorway into a large packing house. At a point about fifty feet west of Chambers street the track is at a varying distance of eleven to twenty feet from the curb in front of a building- occupied as a poultry house. About three o’clock p. m. on December 15, 1900, the
I. It is said that the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict on defendant’s motion because (1) of plaintiff’s failure to look and listen for the approaching train;
We are not prepared to hold, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in cither respect mentioned. He had the right to be in the street with his team, and to stop at the curb as he did for the purpose of loading the crates. He \Vas, of course, bound
As to the next subdivision or ground of the motion to direct a verdict, we have to say that a driver who descends from his wagon for the purpose of putting on a load under the circumstances here shown, never leaving or abandoning the immediate charge and oversight of his beam, is certainly not always or necessarily guilty of negligence, if, for a brief moment, in the prosecution of his work, he lays down the reins without taking the precaution of tying the horses. The act in this instance may or may not have been negligent. Fair-minded men may easily differ in opinion upon that proposition, according as they do or do not give credit and weight to certain items of testimony, and in such cases it is elementary that the court should not direct a verdict. The cases cited by appellant upon this point differ so materially in their facts from the one before us that they ’ cannot be considered applicable or controlling. For instance, in
The other suggestion made, that we should peremptorily hold the plaintiff negligent in seizing this team and in trying to prevent its escape, is too manifestly unreasonable to require discussion. The man, however experienced or prudent, whose first impulse would not be to do the very thing which plaintiff attempted, is a very rare exception to an' almost universal rule. Indeed, if plaintiff had coolly stepped out of the way of harm, and made no attempt to stop his frightened horses, and they had been run down by the train, he would have much difficulty in avoiding the point counsel would doubtless make against his claim for damages — that his excessive prudence was in fact gross negligence. Wasmer v. R. R., 80 N. Y. 212 (36 Am. Rep. 608).
II. Error is assigned upon the court’s refusal to instruct the jury upon defendant’s request, that if plaintiff did not comply with the ordinance forbidding the leaving
III. Appellant complains that, while the court instructed the jury as to plaintiff’s duty after the discovery ■of the approach of the train, it did not instruct as to his ■duty to look out and discover any danger impending from that source. Without extending this opinion to set out the charge of the court, we will say that we have read it ■carefully, and think it is not open to the criticism made upon it. The rule for which appellant contends in this respect, while not stated in the words or form which ■counsel puts it, was, in substance, given by the court, and the principle defining plaintiff’s duty to exercise reasonable' ■and active vigilance for his own safety was fairly and repeatedly stated. There was no error to appellant’s prejudice in this respect. The eleventh paragraph of the^ •charge, to which appellant takes special exception, under-bakes no more than to state the plaintiff’s duty after the discovery of the approach of the train, even though defendant may have been negligent in failing to ring the
IV. The court said to the jury: “The law requires the persons in charge of a train, when approaching a street crossing, to ring the bell to warn persons lawfully at or
V. It is finally urged that as plaintiff was neither on the railway track, nor about to cross it, appellant owed him no duty to ring the bell, and that as to him the
We find no reversible error in the record, and the j udgment of the district court is aeeiemed.