Bruggeman v. Illinois Central Railroad

123 N.W. 1007, 147 Iowa 187
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 123 N.W. 1007 (Bruggeman v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Bruggeman v. Illinois Central Railroad, 123 N.W. 1007, 147 Iowa 187 (iowa 1909).

Opinions

Deemer, J.

That plaintiff received the injuries of which he complains by reason of being struck by a train on defendant’s line of road, at a public highway crossing at the town of Toeterville, is conceded. But defendant denies any negligence on its part, and claims that plaintiff was [190]*190guilty of negligence contributing to his injury, and that he can not recover. That there was enough testimony to take the question of defendant’s negligence to the jury is practically conceded; but it is contended that, as a matter of law, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and that, no matter what the errors of the trial court, the judgment should be affirmed on that ground. Plaintiff’s counsel have exhausted the alphabet in arguing errors, and in addition thereto have used so many numerals that we have not attempted to count them. At the conclusion of their argument they summarize these alleged errors under thirty-seven different heads, and we shall not go beyond this summary in trying to formulate an opinion which will settle the material and controlling points in the case. In view of the conclusion reached it will not be necessary to pass upon many of the propositions argued.

Defendant’s railway runs east and west through the town of Toeterville, and there were two switches in the village, known as the east and west switches. A public highway running north and south crosses the right of way. The west switch is something like eight hundred and ninety-two feet from the point where the highway crosses the main line, and the east switch is about three hundred and seventy-two feet distant therefrom. There are stockyards near the west switch something like five hundred and thirty-four feet from the highway crossing. Westward of the highway crossing about three hundred and thirty-eight feet are some coal sheds, and also an elevator about two hundred feet west of the crossing. These buildings and yards are 'all north of the railroad track and west of the highway crossing. The railway depot is south of the track, and about fifty-seven feet west of the crossing. At the highway crossing there are two tracks, one known as the main line, and the other as the passing track, and the distance between the inside rails of these tracks is something like eight feet and ten inches. At the time of the accident [191]*191in. question there were some box ears on the passing track extending from the elevator to the stockyards, although. as to this there is ■ some dispute in the testimony.

There is an angling road, which leads from the stockyards in a gentle curve along north of the elevator and north of the passing track, and gradually nearing said passing track, and at the point where the highway crosses the passing track joins with this highway and crosses the passing track and the main track. This angling road is the road used by persons having business at the stockyards, who afterwards drive over into the village of Toeterville to make purchases and transact business. The main part of the village of Toeterville is south of the railroad tracks; the only business conducted north of the track being the stockyard business and the lumber yard business. The lumber yards are situated to the east of the north and south highway, a few feet north of the passing track, and being a few feet from the highway. The lumber in the yards was not in sheds on December 1, 1906, but was put in piles north of the lumber office, and had lanes running east and west. These piles were in places high. There is a whistle post west from the center of the public highway, and the distance of the whistle post from the place where the appellant was injured in the center of said highway is two thousand seven hundred and ninety-three feet nine inches.

Plaintiff is a young farmer thirty-four years of age, and “on December 1, 1906, at from about two o’clock to two thirty o’clock p. m., he and his father started to take a load of hogs to Toeterville. The roads were rather rough, and they drove slowly. Appellant and his father, after reaching Toeterville, drove to the stockyards, unloaded the hogs, and weighed them. They then drove slowly from the stockyards on the angling road leading by the north side of the elevator and inclining gently toward the passing track, with the intention of passing over the tracks by way of the public highway and going over into the main part of the village of Toeterville to transact business. There was a train due at the station, coming [192]*192from the west at two thirty-four p. m., but the testimony shows that it was late, some of it indicating that it did not arrive there on the day in question until after three o’clock. The testimony also shows that this train went to the little town of Stacyville, where it was turned around and immediately brought back from the east over the same track. The time taken to go to Stacyville and back was about half an hour. Appellant, with his father by his side seated in a broad-tired lumber wagon, with a hog rack on, and driving a pair of horses, one of which was eighteen and the other twelve years of age, proceeded toward the place where the angling road joins with the highway where it crosses the railroad in the village of Toeterville. According to plaintiff’s testimony, when the horses approached the- side track or passing track north of the main track, and just before the side track was reached, he looked west along the track to note whether there was a train coming. This glance was in the direction of the elevator..... When the appellant looked west toward the elevator to note whether there was a train coming, he said he could see none. His team at this time was, as he says, about up to or just going on the side track. He said: T didn’t see anything, so I looked to the east, because I had an idea that if there was a train coming it would be from Stacy-ville.’ ” Quoting now from his testimony: “I knew about the time trains were due from Stacyville — about three six in the afternoon. My opinion is that this time when I looked must have been about three o’clock. In coming up to the track I listened to know whether there was any signal or anything of the kind. I didn’t hear any.” Witness further says:

I heard a short whistle, and looked back. This was when my horses were stamping the main track. I think they were just with the front feet on the main track. I was sitting on the right side of the wagon and wore a hat which the wind kind of flapped over my face on the side [193]*193toward the elevator. The wind was blowing south. When I heard those sharp whistles, I hollered to my team to jump, but they didn’t, so I swung them off to the left. The train came so fast that’ I couldn’t get • them off in time. The engine caught the right horse under the front legs and threw her up, and that swung the wagon, and the tender caught the wagon on the hind part and smashed that up, and the next thing I knew I had been falling down. As near as I can say I fell down beside the last coach, and when I was lying there the last coach was by. I was lying right on my back, and lifted up my leg and saw my foot was cut off. After I heard that whistle, I looked toward the engine. That was the first I had seen or heard of the train. They were coming pretty fast. If they didn’t come so fast I pretty sure I got off the track. The last coach and last truck must have cut my leg off. The train had gone quite a ways before it stopped after it had hit me.

Other witnesses corroborated plaintiff to some extent:

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.W. 1007, 147 Iowa 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruggeman-v-illinois-central-railroad-iowa-1909.