The questions here are whether this court should abolish the doctrine of sole proximate cause as an affirmative defense and whether the trial court unduly emphasized the defense in its jury instructions. We decline to abolish the defense and find no error in the instructions. We therefore affirm the trial court.
Plaintiff Steven Sponsler appeals from judgment entered on a jury verdict for defendant Clarke Electric Cooperative, Inc. The case arose from an electrical accident which occurred while plaintiff was working for Wayne County on a bridge repair job. Plaintiff was underneath a crane attempting to make some repairs when his supervisor raised the boom into an electric transmission line, causing plaintiff to receive severe electrical burns.
The action against defendant was predicated on alleged negligence in placement of the line, lack of insulation, failure to warn of the danger, and the statutory presumption in section 478.16 of the Iowa Code (1981). In addition to denying plaintiff’s allegations, defendant urged a defense that the sole proximate cause of the accident was negligence of Wayne County or its employee, plaintiff’s supervisor. Defendant introduced evidence of several alleged breaches of duty by the county and the supervisor, and plaintiff admitted those parties were negligent. Plaintiff objected, however, both to the evidence and to the *665 court’s instructions on the sole proximate cause defense. He contended the evidence was irrelevant to the essentials of his claim against defendant, and he asserted the instructions unduly emphasized the defense. The court overruled his objections, and, after the adverse judgment, he appealed.
I.
The sole proximate cause defense.
The sole proximate cause defense has long been recognized in Iowa.
See, e.g., Johnson
v.
McVicker,
The sole proximate cause defense is not limited to situations of alleged negligent conduct by third parties. Any event not chargeable to the defendant that constitutes the sole proximate cause of the injury will, of course, insulate the defendant from liability. The doctrine of “Act of God” is an additional example of the defense.
See Dickman v. Truck Transport, Inc.,
Instructing the jury on the defense is part of the trial court’s obligation to instruct the jury on a party’s theory of the case. We have held this extends to instructing on the specific allegations of a third party’s breach of duty. See
Adam v. T.I.P. Rural Electric Cooperative,
II. The instructions in this case. In one instruction the court informed the jury generally of the doctrine of sole proximate cause and its effect as a bar to recovery. In a separate instruction the court set out defendant’s allegations of negligence against the third parties and repeated its statement that, if established, the defense would bar recovery. Plaintiff contends the instructions were repetitious and unduly emphasized the defense.
Standards for determining whether instructions give prejudicial emphasis to one aspect of the case are discussed in
Manley v. O’Brien County Rural Electric Cooperative,
In this case the best and shortest answer to plaintiff’s contention is that the trial court did substantially what this court said should be done in submitting the defense.
See Adam v. T.I.P. Rural Electric Cooperative,
AFFIRMED.
