Adams v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

179 Iowa 1334
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 14, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 179 Iowa 1334 (Adams v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 179 Iowa 1334 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Gaynor, G. J.

1. Carriers : carriage of passengers : reasonable rules without opportunity to comply therewith : negligence. I. This action is brought by the administratrix of the estate of one Thomas L. Adams to recover damages for his death, claimed to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant.

It appears that one Sam Williamson shipped six head of cattle to the International Live Stock Show in Chicago, from Iowa City, in November, 1912, and took Adams along with him to help care for the cattle. He sold some of the cattle in Chicago and bought others. On December 8th, the live stock show having terminated, Williamson, intending to ship these cattle and some others back to Iowa City, went to the office of the defendant company in Chicago to make arrangements for shipping them home. He got the same car in which [1337]*1337the cattle were shipped to Chicago. He entered into a written contract with the defendant company for the shipment of the cattle. This was the ordinary live stock contract prepared by the company for nse in contracting with shippers for the transportation of cattle. It provided that, for the consideration and mutual covenants and conditions expressed in the contract, it would transport for Williamson certain cattle in a box car. from the Union Stock Yards in Illinois to Iowa City, consigned to Sam Williamson. This contract was executed by Williamson and the company. Among other things, it provided that Williamson should assume all risk, and expense of feeding, watering, bedding, and otherwise caring for the live stock covered by the contract, while in the cars, yards, pens or elsewhere, he to load and unload the same at his own expense and risk; further, that the contract does not entitle the holder, Sam Williamson, or any other person, to ride on any train except the train in which the live stock is transported, and then only for the purpose of caring for such live stock; that the person or persons in charge of the live stock covered by the contract should remain seated in the caboose car attached to the train while the same was in motion, and that, whenever such person or persons should leave the caboose car, or pass over or along the cars or tracks, they should do so at their own risk of personal injuries from every cause whatever; and that the company should not be required to stop or start this train or caboose car at depots or platforms, or to furnish lights for the accommodation and safety of such persons. After this contract was executed by Williamson and the company, one of defendant’s employees brought it to the car in which the stock were to be shipped and in which they were housed. Adams was there. Williamson was not there at the time. The contract was handed to Adams, the party supposing it was Williamson. This was brought for the purpose of having [1338]*1338the following provision on the back of the contract signed:

“We, the undersigned, owners, or in charge-of the live stock mentioned in the within contract, in consideration of the free passage granted us by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, hereby agree that said company shall not be liable to us for any injury or damage of any kind suffered by us while in charge of said live stock or On our return passage.”

As said before, the employee of the company presented this to Adams, who was in the car in whch the stock was to be shipped. Adams signed this part of the contract in the name of Williamson. It appears to have been signed in duplicate; one copy was kept by Adams, and the other by the company. When Williamson came to the car, Adams showed him this contract with this endorsement on the back, which Williamson .examined and returned to Adams, and Adams retained the contract in his possession. The cattle were loaded at the chutes in the Union Stock Yards, Adams and Williamson helping in the loading, and they both remained with the cattle in the car while it remained in the yards. The cars were switched about in the yards for some hours after they were loaded,' presumably for the purpose of making up the train.

It appears from the testimony that it was the purpose of Williamson that Adams should act as caretaker of this shipment. Adams was employed by Williamson to take care of the cattle on their journey from the stockyards to Iowa City. This was a rush freight train — stopped only when occasion required it, to set out or take on other cars, or to let passenger trains pass by. It was a train that stopped in the yards, when stopped at all. It was not required to stop at platforms or passenger depots. The train, after being switched around over the stockyards during the afternoon, left Chicago about five' o’clock. ■ It was then dark. The conductor of the train testifies:

[1339]*1339“The first stop was at Mokena, 30 miles from the La Salle Street station. The next was at New Lenox, 34 miles; the next at Joliet. We did not stop in the yard. We stopped for the railway crossing at Joliet. The next stop was at Rockdale. We next stopped at Morris, 62 miles from Chicago; then at Bureau, 85 miles from Chicago; then at Utica, 94 miles west; then at De Pue, 110 miles from Chicago; then at Bureau Junction, 114 miles; then within 6 miles of Sheffield.”

At Sheffield, the car in which Williamson’s stock was shipped was found to be on fire. It was there that plaintiff’s intestate received the injuries from the fire that caused his death. When the train left Chicago, it had attached to it what is known as a terminal caboose. The car in which the fire occurred which caused the death was the twenty-second car from the caboose, and seventeen cars back from the engine. It is claimed that the fire was caused by a hot box. That there was a fire, and that it caused the death of plaintiff’s intestate, is not disputed. There were ten loads of stock, all from the exhibition, on this train. A regular stockman’s caboose was attached to the train at Blue Island or Burr Oak. We wrill not enter into a discussion of the evidence, in so far as it relates to the negligence of' the defendant. There is a sharp controversy upon this issue. There is evidence, however, that the fire that burned the car in which deceased was riding, originated outside the car, and we think the evidence sufficient to justify a finding on the part of the jury that the fire originated from a hot box. So we pass this question to the more serious questions presented by this record.

The contract under which the plaintiff’s intestate was riding provided that the persons in charge of the live stock should remain seated in the caboose attached to the train, while the train was in motion. Deceased and Williamson; at the time of the fire, were riding in the car with the stock* [1340]*1340and it is claimed that this fact defeats recovery. That plaintiff’s intestate had a right to ride upon this train as caretaker we think is evidenced by the contract itself. The contract provides that it does not entitle the holder thereof, or any other person, to ride on any train except the train on which the live stock is transported, and then only for the purpose of caring for such live stock. The converse of this is that the holder of the contract, or other person, may ride upon the train on which the stock are transported, for the purpose of caring for the stock. It contemplates that some person shall be in charge of the stock, and that some person shall ride upon the train upon which the stock are transported; for it says in the fourth paragraph of the contract that:

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Bluebook (online)
179 Iowa 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-iowa-1917.