153 Iowa 78 | Iowa | 1911
The defendant set up an affirmative defense to the effect that the road was constructed by an independent contractor, known as the Northwestern Construction Company, and that if there was any negligence in the construction of the road such negligence was chargeable to the independent contractor alone, and that the defendant never assented to or acquiesced in any such act of negligent construction. A written contract was introduced in evidence, purporting to have been entered into in June, 1906, by the defendant railroad company and the construction company, above named. It was and is the contention of the defendant that such written contract was conclusive proof in support of its defense, and that the trial court should have directed a verdict in its favor on such ground. The contract is too lengthy to be set out in full. The trial court submitted to the jury the question whether the road was in fact constructed by an independent contractor. It is urged that the submission of such a question was in effect permitting the jury to construe a written contract. We are convinced that the defendant has no just ground of complaint at this point, and this, is so for divers reasons.
The written contract was not conclusive upon the plaintiff. He was not a party thereto. In so far as such contract became proper evidence on behalf of the defendant, the plaintiff was entitled to meet it by other evidence, parol or otherwise. The contract on its face was incomplete in its provisions. It called for a construction of the road in accord with certain specifications, which were to be thereafter presented and attached to the contract. It is not made to appear that any specifications were ever thereafter attached or presented. It is conceded that the road was not in fact constructed by such construction company. The claim at this point is. that it sublet the work to a subcontractor under a written contract, which is not in evidence.
There, is the further difficulty for the defendant that the plaintiff claims as for a continuing injury in the continuance of the exposure of his drain tile to the action .of the frost. Even if the construction company were exclusively guilty.of the initial wrong, the defendant continued the wrong which resulted in final injury to the plaintiff. The defendant’s possession of the right of way was primarily exclusive, and it alone could, restore the surface’ of the ground to the condition necessary for the protection of the tile. It is undisputed that the removal of the dirt from above the tile was wholly unnecessary for the purpose of the construction of the road. We are impressed that the rule of exemption from liability for acts of an independent contractor has little, if any, application to such a case as this, and that the instruction of the trial court on that subject was rather more favorable to the defendant than it was entitled to. In any event, the evidence is quite sufficient to show the assent and acquiescence of the company. Waltemeyer v. Wisconsin Railway, 11 Iowa, 629. On the other hand, there is no evidence tending to show-that the contractor went beyond the specifications or exceeded the authority conferred upon him by the defendant company. Elliott on Railroads, vol. 2 (2d Ed.), 868; Bloomfield v. Grace, 112 Ind. 128, (13 N. E. 680). It is our conclusion that the trial court did not err in refusing a peremptory instruction upon this question.
What we have here said in this division of the opinion is practically determinative of the questions raised concerning the items of the verdict of $1.50 and $25 already referred to, and we shall not enter into a further discussion of such items.
YI. Some other errors are assigned and argued which relate to rulings on evidence. The discussions in divisions 2 and 3 hereof are quite decisive of them all, and we will not elaborate upon them in detail.
We find no ground of reversal. The judgment below is therefore affirmed.