128 Iowa 365 | Iowa | 1905
The defendant’s roundhouse is semicircular, with a track leading to each stall from a turntable in the center. When engines are brought in for repair, their wheels are sometimes removed and taken over this table to the shop to be tightened, and then returned. On the afternoon of November 25, 1901, the deceased, John Schroeder, and five others were engaged in rolling a pair of engine wheels, attached to ah axle, back to a stall, under the direction of one Higgins, the erecting foreman of the shops. The wheels, after passing over the table, “ slued off the rails ” (that is, one wheel got a little in advance of the other), and, at Higgins’ direction, were backed on the track a few feet, until the counterbalances were down, with the view of wedging one and bringing the other into position on the rail (that is, of squaring the wheels on the rails) by the use of a pinch bar. Schroeder, with three others, was on the side /toward the table, and as he stepped back his foot was caught between the rails approaching the table from adjoining stalls as they neared the frog made use of in such intersections, and the wheel rolled over the left foot and bruised the right knee. One witness thought that, had he been in an upright position, his shoe would not have caught, while another declared that it was held fast. Several grounds of negligence were alleged by the plaintiff, but the only one the evidence tended to prove was that defendant omitted to block the frogs. It made use of a cast frog, which included the point and the ends of the two rails of an ordinary frog. The diverging rails running from the stalls of the roundhouse came to this point, and no
The only testimony relating to his temperature was that of his father, who said he did not' know whether he had any fever or not; that he saw the doctor taking his temperature, but did not ask what it was. One witness testified that he kept getting worse until he died, qn September 9, 1902, but the attending circumstances of that event are not disclosed in the record. He was twenty years old, had been healthy during the preceding four years, but had suffered from an attack of inflammatory rheumatism for six weeks some eight years previous to the accident, since which time his feet had troubled him when standing a considerable time; having loose swellings or corns on the soles. Two- physicians on the part of defendant, in answer to hypothetical questions fairly stating the facts as recited above, save in assuming there was no rise in temperature, expressed’ opinions that death could not have resulted from the accident.
The evidence as to the cause of death is not satisfactory, but, in the absence of any other explanation, we think it such that the jury might have attributed it to the injury received. The conditions present, according to all the physicians, were such that they might have produced the disease known as “ endocarditis,” and the only symptom of that lacking was high temperature, which, for all that appears, may have existed. According to one of them, it is reasonably probable that such disease resulted therefrom. It was shown to be a fatal disease. ■ Certainly the evidence of his condition, in connection with the opinions of the experts, furnished a reasonable and probable explanation of the cause which occasioned his death; and, in the absence of some other, the court ought not to say that the jury might not fairly have found that the injury and consequences thereof ended
Exception is taken to appellant’s brief. It was in substantial'compliance with the rules of this court, and that is all that should be exacted.— Reversed.