70 Iowa 584 | Iowa | 1887
The injury complained of occurred on the sixteenth of August, 1884. At that time plaintiff was about fifteen months old. The accident occurred at a point where defendants railway is crossed b^a^ublic highway. The general direction of the railway is east and west, and that of the highway is north and south. Plaintiff’s parents, at the time, resided in a house which is situated on the north side of defendant’s right of way, and in the angle between it and the highway, and about forty-five yards from the track. • While the other members of the family were engaged in their ordinary employments, plaintiff wandered away from the house, and entered upon the track near the crossing, and sat down between the rails. A few moments afterwards, and before her absence was noticed, a train approached the crossing from the east. She was first discovered by the fireman, who was at his window in the cab, looking out along the track ahead of the engine. When he first discovered the object on the track, he supposed it to be a sheaf of wheat or oats that had been dropped upon the crossing from some passing ivagon. Very soon afterwards, however, he noticed it move, and he then
The circuit court instructed the jury that it was the duty of the engineer in charge of the engine to keep a reasonably vigilant lookout to discover any object that might chance to be upon the track in front of the train, and that if he neglected to do so, and by reason of such negligence he failed to discover plaintiff’s presence upon the track in time to stop the train before it reached her, defendant was liable for the injury. The objection urged by counsel against the instructions is that it holds defendant liable as for negligence in a matter which involves no breach of duty on its part. The argument is that to render an act or omission negligent it must amount to a breach of duty; that the extent of the engineer’s duty in the premises was to keep a vigilant lookout upon the track to discover any object the presence of which was reasonably to be apprehended; and, as the presence of a child of that age, unattended, upon the track, was not reasonably to be apprehended, he was under no duty to
¥e appreciate the importance of tbe question here presented; but, owing to other matters appearing in the record, it
II. Counsel for the defendant asked the coui’t to instruct the jury that if the parents of plaintiff took no precaution to
We find in the record no ground for disturbing the judgment of the circuit court, and it will be
AfKIRMBD.