Borough v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad
Borough v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad
Opinion of the Court
— This case is now before us on the third appeal. The first trial resulted in a directed verdict for the defendant, and reversal upon plaintiff’s appeal. Borough v. Minneapolis & St. L. R. Co., 184 Iowa 210. The second trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, and a reversal upon defendant’s
Except appellant’s contention that the verdict is excessive, all of the errors assigned are predicated upon the instructions given and the refusal of the court to give a large number of instructions requested by appellant. Many of the matters argued were involved upon the former appeals, and what is there said is determinative of them.
Appellant requested the court, in effect, to instruct the jury that, if the injuries complained of were the result of the joint negligence of appellant and 'appellee, then no recovery could be had. The court, in a number of its instructions, fully defined contributory negligence, as applied to the facts of this case. The substance of the requested instruction was, in effect, repeatedly stated by the court.
“Any act of negligence, if any, on the part of any one of said three persons which contributed in any manner to the injury complained of would be, in law, the negligence of all three of them.”
This thought is embodied in some of the instructions referred to above. The language of the court was somewhat less emphatic than the language of the requested instructions, but the subject of contributory negligence was fully covered by the instructions given.
Appellee testified that, just before the engine struck the buggy, the freight train was suddenly, violently, and without warning closed up. It is not wholly clear from the evidence just how the movement of the freight train contributed to the accident, but it was a part of the circumstances; and the time that intervened between the time when appellee and his companions went upon the crossing and the closing up of the freight train and the collision, could not have exceeded a very few seconds.
In another instruction, appellant requested the' court to instruct the jury that, although it found that the freight train was closed up without warning, nevertheless, if the evidence further showed that the rig in which the parties were riding was struck by the passenger train ag ^ j10rge gapped onto the main-line track, then the closing u-p of the freight train without warning could not be said to have been the' proximate cause of the in
Paragraphs 1 and 314 of the court’s charge are excepted to on the ground that they do not correctly state the issues, and that they are in part in conflict with Instruction No. 2. The statement of the issues is somewhat involved, but not to such an extent as to have been likely to confuse or mislead the jury. Instruction No. 3% and also No. 7 submitted to the jury, as one of the grounds of negligence, the failure of appellant to ring the bell or sound the whistle on the passenger train as it approached the crossing. It is contended that this issue is wholly without support in the evidence. The greater number of the witnesses testified that the whistle was blown, but there is sufficient to the contrary to raise a conflict in the evidence. This being true, the instructions are not in this particular erroneous. Further exceptions are urged to Instruction No. 7, but they are without merit.
Paragraphs 9, 16, 18, and 23 are also assailed by counsel in argument. These instructions all bear on the question of contributory negligence. We have read, examined, and analyzed all of them with care. Courts rarely attain perfection in instructing juries. No doubt, the thought embraced in each of these instructions might have been. conveyed to the jury by a great variety of expression, and possibly some of the language of the court is susceptible of improvement; but, taken as a whole, the instructions on this subject were favorable to appellant. Nothing has escaped the vigilance and skill of counsel,
Instruction No. 25 related to the consideration to be given mortality tables. The instruction standing alone may be slightly faulty, but, when read in connection with the preceding paragraph, it would seem to be sufficient, and incapable of misleading the jury. To set out all of the instructions requested and those given by the court upon its own motion that are criticized by counsel would extend this opinion to a greater length than the questions involved fairly justify. We have therefore deemed it sufficient to state generally our conclusion. No point argued by appellant has been overlooked by the court in the consideration of the case. We find no reversible error in the instruction upon the defendant’s appeal. .
But one question remains for consideration. That is the claim of appellant that the verdict is excessive. The verdict' upon the last trial was $15,075, and upon the prior trial $16,000. The court reduced it to $12,000. A careful consideration of the evidence describing appellee’s injuries has led us to the conclusion that the verdict should be further reduced in the sum of $2,000. The injuries suffered by appellee consisted of one broken bone of each leg, an injury to the shoulder, which interferes somewhat with the movement of the arm upward, and a depression in the skull. Appellee was confined in the hospital for several weeks, and for several months thereafter walked with the aid of crutches. Owing to a defect in the union of one of the fractured bones, one leg is slightly shortened. The evidence that his injuries will permanently disable him so as to prevent him from following his calling as a farmer is not very persuasive. If appellee will file his election in writing, consenting to a reduction of the verdict to $10,000, within 30 days after the date of the filing of this opinion, the judgment of the court below will be affirmed; otherwise it will be reversed.—Affirmed on condition.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.