101 F. 915 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa | 1900
On July 16, 1898, the plaintiff received severe personal injuries from being thrown from a buggy in which she was riding, at a crossing over the line of the defendant railway
The evidence on the trial showed that the plaintiff and her daughter, the latter driving the horse, were passing along the highway at a point where it approached the crossing, and while at some little distance from the crossing a freight train overtook them, and the horse took fright thereat, and ran away, but in its flight followed the highway until it reached the railway crossing, when first the plaintiff, and then the daughter, were thrown from the vehicle. Upon the question whether steam was negligently allowed or caused to escape from the engine, thereby frightening the horse, the evidence was in conflict; and the court instructed the jury that if they found from the evidence that, when approaching the crossing, the parties in charge of the engine negligently caused or permitted steam to escape from the engine, thereby frightening the horse, that would justify them in finding a verdict for the plaintiff, without regard to the question of the good or bad condition of the crossing; for the evidence clearly showed that the rapid speed of the horse caused the plaintiff to be thrown from the buggy, and therefore, as the rapid speed of the runaway horse was due to its fright, if that was caused by the negligence of the company in causing or permitting the escape of the steam from the engine, then the proper causal connection was proven to exist between the negligent act of the company and the resulting injury to the plaintiff. The court further instructed the jury that if they found under the evidence that the defendant company was not in fault in causing the fright of the horse, or, in other words, did not negligently cause or permit the escape of steam from the engine, then the verdict must be for the defendant, for the reason that the evidence would not justify them in finding that the condition of the crossing was the proximate cause of the accident.
Under these instructions, the jury found for the defendant; thus finding that the fright of the horse was not caused by any negligence or fault on part of the railway company. The plaintiff now moves for a new trial on the ground that the court erred in not submitting to the jury the question of the condition of the crossing, and in ruling that, under the evidence, its condition was not the proximate cause of the accident to plaintiff. In support of the motion for new trial, it is earnestly contended by counsel for plaintiff that the facts of the case bring it within the rule recognized in that class of cases bf which Manderscheid v. City of Dubuque, 25 Iowa, 108, is a fair type. In that case plaintiff’s horses ran away, and in passing over
In the case now before the court it was claimed on behalf of the plaintiff on the trial that the crossing in question was in bad condition in several particulars; that at the point where the highway turned to meet the approach to the crossing proper there was a mnd hole at one side of the traveled track; that there was a sluice or waterway constructed under the wagonway, distant some ten or more feet from the rail of the track; that the top of this waterway, which extended across the highway practically at a right angle, was about a foot higher than the top of the rails, distant ten feet or more; and that the planks forming the crossing at the rails had become worn, so that the rails were one or two inches higher than the planking. The evidence wholly failed to show that the mudhole at the side of the traveled track contributed in any degree to the accident, but it was clearly proven that when the buggy reached the covered waterway the hump or jolt resulting from its passage over the ridge formed by the covering of the waterway was such as to throw the plaintiff out of the vehicle, and upon the ground, thus causing the injuries complained of to the person of the plaintiff. This “ridge,” to call it such, had existed in the highway for years. It had been driven over daily by all who had occasion to use the crossing. It was not shown or claimed that it had ever caused an accident to any one. The evidence, without contradiction, was to the .effect that the ridge was not an obstruction to the safe use of the crossing, under usual and ordinary circumstances. The testimony of the persons who had been in the habit of driving over this crossing proved that, if the plaintiff’s horse had been traveling at any reasonable, even though fast, rate, the plaintiff would have been carried over the crossing without injury. The plaintiff was undoubtedly thrown out of the buggy by the severity of the jolt caused by the wheels striking the so-called “ridge,” but the dangerous character of the jolt was due to the rapid speed of the horse, and not to any inherently dangerous condition of the crossing resulting from the existence of the ridge across the same. To sustain the contention that its presence in the highway would have justified the jury in finding that thereby the cross
Upon the trial before the jury, the plaintiff claimed that the defendant had been guilty of negligence in two particulars: First, in permitting an unnecessary escape of the steam, thereby frightening the horse, and causing it to run away, which resulted in the plaintiff being thrown from the buggy, to her injury; second, that the defendant had not exercised proper care in constructing and maintaining the crossing in safe condition for ordinary use, as a result of which the plaintiff was injured by being thrown from the vehicle in which she was riding.
It is now contended, in support of the motion for new trial, that the court erred in charging the jury that the condition of the crossing could not be held, under the facts of the case, to be a proximate cause of -the accident, and consequent injury; to plaintiff. If the court ;was justified in the ruling that the evidence-would not sustain ¿.finding that the company had been negligent in causing or per