156 Iowa 664 | Iowa | 1912
While a passenger on one of defendant’s trains in the state of South Dakota plaintiff claims to have been injured through the negligence of defendant’s servants and agents in handling a mixed train made up of freight and passenger coaches. It is claimed that these employees switched the train upon which plaintiff was riding onto a side track against a freight car or cars standing upon the siding with such force and violence as to violently shock him and injure and wrench the muscles and tendons of his back, thus severely and permanently injuring him. The
What would you say as a physician and surgeon as to the probability of his injury, the probable cause of the injury that you have detailed before the jury? What do you say was the probable cause of the injury? . . . Q. Now, Doctor, taking these facts into consideration, under these and no others, what would you say was the cause of the detachment or rupture of the muscles ? . . . Taking these facts into consideration and no others, what would you say was the probable cause of the injury? . . . What do you say was the fact with these facts and others, what would you say was the probable cause of the injury? . . . Q. Now, Doctor, taking the same question which I gave you, taking these same facts into consideration and no others, what will you say was the cause of the condition that you have detailed here to the jury ? (The answers to these interrogatories were as follows:) A. Well, it seems to me I have answered the question before that covers the question from the history given by the above. I would sáy that the circumstances on the railroad train caused the injury. ... A. I should say unquestionably it was due to the impact of the train causing enforced flection of the spine. ... A. Due to the impact of the cars.
In addition to objecting to the questions when propounded as incompetent calling for conclusions and invading the province of the jury, defendant’s counsel moved to strike -each and all of these answers. The objections and motions were overruled, and these rulings present the only serious question in the case. Unless we are to make a radical departure from the rule announced in many of our
Having so many times announced the rule for this state, and finding it well supported by decisions in other jurisdictions, we do not feel like changing it at this time; thus introducing confusion in the cases. As defendant very strenuously contends that there was no such shock or jar of the train as would have produced the injury claimed by plaintiff, the opinions of these experts as to the probable cause of injury, if erroneous, were manifestly prejudicial, and as said by Hand, J., in Ill. Central v. Smith, supra:
Because of the error pointed out the judgment must be, and it is, reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. — Reversed and remanded.