40 Iowa 526 | Iowa | 1875
The cow of jdaintrff was killed upon a railroad owned by the Cedar Falls & Sioux City ¿Railroad Company. The Illinois Central Railroad Company leased the road, and the defendant runs its trains thereon under a lease, or contract, with that company. The first count of defendant’s answer denies all the allegations of the petition involving its liability; another count, confessing that the animal was killed by a train of cars run by defendant, alleges, in avoidance, that the road was fenced by the Ill. Cen. R. Co., which alone had the right to fence, and that the fence so constructed was kept in good repair, and that neither defendant nor the Ill. Cen. R. Co.
Upon tbe trial, in order to establish that tbe cow was killed by defendant’s train, a witness was permitted to testify to certain
I. Tbe evidence was clearly incompetent. Tbe declarations of tbe engineer were not. of tbe res gestee, and it does not appear that tbe nature of the employment of tbe engineer created such a relation between him and defendant as rendered tbe declarations binding upon defendant. Story’s Agency, § 135, et seg.; 1 Greenleaf’s Ev., § 113, et seg.; Luby et ux. v. The Hudson River R. Co., 17 N. Y., 131.
II. The declaration of tbe attorney was manifestly incompetent. Admissions of an attorney, in order to bind bis client,
III. It is urged that tbe fact wbicb the evidence tended to establish was admitted in tbe second count of defendant’s
We are unable to say that, independent of the incompetent evidence, the fact that defendant's train killed the cow was established by the proof, or should have been found by the District Court. The incompetent evidence was not so unimportant, in our judgment, that it had no influence upon the decision of the case. • We cannot, therefore, say that the error of its admission wrought defendant no prejudice.
Other questions presented in argument need not be considered, as, for the error above pointed out, the judgment of the District Court must be
REVERSED. ■