77 Iowa 429 | Iowa | 1889
,1. Master and servant: mvant: negii[owgervant: I. It is conceded that the accident happened by reason of the breaking of the pin in the snatch-block, and that the pin was defect- . . . -1-iye m that it was so much worn as to be insufficient to withstand the weight of the descending cars. One of the mam points in controversy is whether the snatch-block and rigging were put in position under the orders of any one who stood in the relation of vice-principal to the defendant. The plaintiff claims that Horner, the man who directed the scraper to be brought or thrown down, stood in the place of the company, and that he directed the construction of the appliance which caused the
As we have said, it is not claimed that the defective snatch-block was put in position for use by the direction of the superintendent, nor by Washer. It is claimed, however, that, as both were absent, Horner acted in the place of the superintendent, or, in other words, acted as and for the defendant, and that the snatch-block was used by his direction. And the jury all through the instructions given to them by the court were charged upon the theory that there was evidence from which such a finding could be made. We do not think these instructions were proper under the evidence, in view of the repeated decisions of this court as to the law applicable to cases of this character. The seventeenth paragraph of the charge to the jury is as follows: “It was the duty of the defendant to exercise reasonable care and prudence to protect the men who were ' employed by and working for it from injury; and if an
III. Much of the argument of counsel for appellant is to the effect that the court erred in not sustaining a motion in arrest of judgment based upon a variance between the averments of the petition and the evidence
Reversed.