55 Iowa 326 | Iowa | 1880
In defense of the instruction our attention is called by the apjiellee to Greenleaf v. The Illinois Cent. R. Co., 29 Iowa, 14 (42). In that case the words “ the car which produced the accident” were held to be unobjectionable, and upon the ground that they merely designated the car which the plaintiff claimed was defective in its construction. That case differs from the case at bar. In the case at bar the court had no occasion to distinguish the platform in question from other platforms. Beside, in the case cited it is stated as a fact that the decedent was thrown or compelled to jump from a certain car; about this there appears to have been no controversy. The question was as to whether the car was defective, and this question appears to have been fairly submitted.
The instruction under consideration is further objected to by appellant because it excludes from the consideration of the jury the question as to whether the decedent did not waive the negligence of the appellant, if there was any. There is some doubt in our minds whether under the answer there is any question of waiver in the case. The ajjpellee, as we understand, contends that there is not, because the answer is silent upon it. The question as to the sufficiency of the answer in this respect is not argued by counsel upon either side, and we shall not pass upon it. The case must be re
The instruction, we think, was properly refused. A person is not necessarily guilty of negligence because he does not avoid a known danger. Greenleaf v. The Dubuque & Sioux City R. Co., 33 Iowa, 52 (57). The fact of knowledge of the danger on the part of the plaintiff may he given in evidence as a circumstance tending to show negligence.
In this connection it is proper to observe that, where the plaintiff has waived the defendant’s negligence, no inquiry need he made as to whether the plaintiff has been guilty of contributory negligence. But there may he knowledge on the part of the plaintiff of the defendant’s negligence without a waivei’, as where the plaintiff has protested, or has been promised amendment. In such case knowledge on the part of the plaintiff goes to the question of his contributory negligence, and that only. But it is not, as the instruction claims, conclusive.
With reference to this evidence the plaintiff asked an instruction in these words: “ The statement, if any, made by the deceased shortly after the accident, concerning the way in which he received the fatal injury, will be carefully considered by you with all the circumstances connected therewith, his suffering, and whether he was in a condition to speak with mature consideration and due deliberation, and then you are to give his statement such weight as you may believe from all the circumstances it is entitled to. And such statement of the deceased will not be conclusive of ;fche truth of what/ he stated, but you will consider all the testimony in relation to such matters, and then come to. such conclusion in relation thereto as in your judgment the whole evidence will justify.” The court gave the instruction as asked, and the defendant excepted. It is insisted by the defendant that the instruction carries an implication that, if the deceased did not speak with “mature consideration and due deliberation,” his statement would be entitled to little, if any weight.
The instruction does not to our mind clearly carry such implication, and we are not prepared to say that it contains reversible error; yet in view of the fact that there must be another trial, we are unwilling to say that it meets our unqualified approval. It has the characteristics of an instruction drawn by counsel. As is often the case in such instructions, it has the appearance of an attempt to create an undue bias in favor of the party in whose behalf the instruction is asked, without introducing into it actual reversible error. This court has frequently suggested that in such case it would be better if the trial court would refuse the instruction asked, and substitute one of its own.
It is a well known fact that, where a person is prostrated by a fatal accident, the mental powers are usually more or less affected. "Where such is the case, the statements of the person cannot be said to be as fully reliable as they would
The defendant objects particularly to the last words of the instruction, in which the jury was told that they might infer that the deceased was in the line of his duty and in the exercise of proper care, if such inference was in perfect harmony with the established facts.
We can conceive that facts might be relied upon by the plaintiff, which really had no bearing upon the question as to whether the deceased was at the time of the accident in the
The rule of law upon the point in question is, we think, a very obvious one, and very easily expressed.
It was not necessary for the plaintiff to show by direct and positive evidence that the deceased at the time of the accident was in the line of his duty, and exercising proper care. It was sufficient if such was the reasonable inference from the facts proven. But such inference is not to be gathered from facts which are simply not inconsistent with it. As the jury might have supposed from the instruction that it could, we think the instruction erroneous.
Reversed.