138 Iowa 178 | Iowa | 1908
Daniel Clancy was killed October 27, 1903, while rendering services as a brakeman in the employment of the Mason City & Ft. Dodge Railway Company. That company was then using the rolling stock of the Chicago Great Western Railway Company, and this accounts for the two companies being joined as parties defendant. The general direction of the road is east and west, and at McClelland the house track is in front and immediately north of the depot, and beyond that is the main track. The side or switch track is south of it. The freight train pulled in from the East at about half past six o’clock p. m., stopping on the house track in front of the depot. The engine and one car were “ cut off,” and, after a couple of cars had been “ picked up,” these were being “ shoved down ” to the
The casual connection between the injury and the negligence of the defendant may be proved by direct or circumstantial evidence, but the evidence, such as it is, must be something more than consistent with the plaintiff’s theory of how the accident occurred. It must be such as to make that theory reasonably probable, not simply possible. In the case before us the explanation of the accident urged by defendant — i. e., that deceased was between the cars — and must have stumbled because of the looseness of the gravel — is quite as consistent with the proof, and fits in with the other facts quite as reasonably as that of plaintiff, to the effect that, in walking along, he must have stepped into the depression, been thrown or swung around, and fallen forward. If so, then it is a mere matter of conjecture how it all happened, and the evidence is quite as consistent with the theory that it resulted from another cause than the negligence of defendant, as that there was casual connection therewith. This being so, the court rightly directed a verdict for the defendant — Affirmed.