127 Iowa 654 | Iowa | 1905
The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was without support in the evidence. The only negligence on the part of the employes of the defendant which plaintiff attempted to establish was alleged negligence in announcing the name of the station prior to a stopping of the train at a place before the station was reached, so that plaintiff was induced to go out upon the platform of the passenger coach, preparatory to getting off at a place where there was no station platform, and afterwards, without warning to the plaintiff, suddenly starting the train again for the purpose of pulling up to the station platform, by which sudden starting plaintiff was thrown from the platform to the ground, and received the injuries complained of. The testimony of plaintiff
The only witness who testified for the plaintiff with reference to the place where plaintiff fell or was thrown from the train said that he was the night policeman at the station at the time plaintiff was injured; was at the depot when the train came in; that the train stopped before it reached the station, in accordance with its usual custom, north of the clearance point of the tracks of the Wabash* and Iowa Central roads, which both come into the same station; that the switch stand for these two tracks is about opposite the north end of the station, and that, upon being advised that some one had been thrown from the train, he went to the opposite side of the train from the station, and found plaintiff lying on the ground about seventy-five or one hundred feet north of the switch stand, the point where he was found being twenty-five or thirty feet south of the point of clearance of the two tracks. It is conclusively shown by half a dozen witnesses, including the conductor, the car inspector, a bus driver, and two passengers, that the train stopped before reaching the clearance point for the two tracks, and that when it was thus stopped
Without further discussing the details of the evidence, we reach the conclusion that the uncontroverted testimony as to the place where the train stopped and the place where plaintiff Was found conclusively negatives the testimony that he was .jerked from the train, and proves beyond question that he fell from the train while attempting to dismount after the train was in motion, and therefore" shows that he was guilty of contributory negligence.
The court should have sustained the motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, and the judgment is reversed.