156 Iowa 229 | Iowa | 1912
The defendant built and maintained a bridge over the Boyer river, on a north and south highway. Its servants were replanking this bridge, and, when they quit work on Saturday, they had laid new oak plank on all but about sixteen feet of the bridge. They left. a pile of new plank on the west side of the bridge, about midway of its length, and a pile of the old plank at the north end of the bridge, on the east side of the dirt roadway. On Sunday morning the plaintiff with her father and mother and other members of the family were in a conveyance, going north on said highway; her father driving the team of two horses. They drove onto the bridge from the south, and when they reached the pile of new plank, the team became frightened thereat, shied to the east, and started to run. Some of the new plank that' had been placed on the floor north of the center of the bridge had not been spiked down, and, when the team was running over them, they moved, and contributed to the fright of the team, and, when the north end of the bridge was reached, the team was still further frightened by the old pile of plank,
Whether an approach to a bridge is a part of the bridge is generally a question for the jury. Nims v. Boone County, 66 Iowa, 272; Moreland v. Mitchell County, 40 Iowa, 394. But in the trial of this case below, and in argument here, it seems to be taken for granted that, if the old lumber rested on the additional fill made necessary to re'ach the bridge, its location there might be negligence for which the defendant would be liable.
The instructions asked by the defendant, so far as