65 Iowa 505 | Iowa | 1885
The evidence given on the trial shows that plaintiff informed defendant in the month of December,
It frequently happens that single pieces of baggage, weighing as much as two hundred and fifty pounds, are carried on the car, and the express business done on the line is quite extensive. The handling of the baggage .requires the exercise of a good deal of physical strength; and a good deal of dispatch is required in the transaction of the express business to avoid delaying the train unduly at the different stations. The express messenger is also required to make duplicate waybills of such express matter as is received at certain stations on the line, and to enter them upon his delivery book. This writing must be done while the train is in motion; and, as
It was claimed by defendant that plaintiff did not possess the physical strength requsite for the handling of the baggage; and that he possessed neither the skill nor activity required in the proper transaction of the express business; and that he could not write a legible hand.
The questions related exclusively to plaintiff’s fitness for the position of baggage-man and express messenger, and his capacity to perform the duties of that position. This, we think, was in no sense a question of science or skill, or one upon which inexperienced persons are incapable of forming a correct judgment without the aid of the opinions of experts. Nor is it one in which the facts, from which the judgment
As the question of plaintiff’s fitness for the position was to be determined from these facts, it was clearly the province of the jury to determine it. It was for them, and not for the witnesses, to determine what conclusions or deductions should be drawn from the facts which were established. In excluding the evidence of the opinions of the witnesses, the circuit court followed the rule on the subject as heretofore laid down by this court. See Muldowney v. Illinois Cent. R’y Co.,
The instruction as asked by defendant is clearly right, and tire proposition embodied in it is expressed with reasonable clearness, and the court might well have given it in the form in which it was asked; but no prejudice could result to defendant from the giving of the clause added by the court. The meaning of the instruction was not thereby changed; for the thought expressed in the clause added is substantially the same as that expressed in the original instruction.
The judgment of the circuit court must be
Affirmed.