163 Iowa 316 | Iowa | 1913
The defendant operates a street railway in the city of Boone. The plaintiff is a teamster, and at the time in question undertook to drive across the defendant’s track, when his wagon was struck by a moving ear, and the force of the collision was such that he was thrown from the vehicle, and injured. The defendant is charged with being negligent in the matter as follows: In operating the car at a negligent and excessive rate of speed; in failing to give any warning or signal of the approach of the car; in failing to keep any lookout to avoid danger of collision; in failing to provide any sufficient headlight; and in accelerating the speed of the car without any care to ascertain whether the track was clear. The defendant denies the alleged negligence, and con
I. Without further prolonging this statement of the. record, we think it cannot be said there was no case for the jury upon the question of defendant’s negligence. The testimony would have justified a finding that the ear was being allowed to coast down a sharp grade through the darkness at a high rate of speed and along a street which the public had the right to travel, and was not being kept under such control that it might be stopped with reasonable quickness at the discovery of danger, and upon such record a verdict or finding of want of due care would have ample support.
It is next said the hypothesis as stated by plaintiff’s counsel has no support in the testimony.. It may be said that, as is usually the case, the question is framed to present the plaintiff’s theory in its most favorable aspect; but we think it does not so distort or depart from the record that the answer should have been excluded.
We find no sufficient ground for ordering a new trial, and the judgment below is Affirmed.