Hammer v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R'y Co.

15 N.W. 597, 61 Iowa 56
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 20, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 N.W. 597 (Hammer v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R'y 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
Hammer v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R'y Co., 15 N.W. 597, 61 Iowa 56 (iowa 1883).

Opinion

Rotheook, J.

1.railroads: pioyeVnegfi! genee. píead- — I. The' wrongs complained of consisted in the alleged negligence of the defendant’s employes in operating their train; and. the facts set forth in the petition constituted but one cause of action. It .g determine from the abstract of the pleadings the precise form of the petition at any stage of the proceedings. "We incline to, think, from an examination of the abstract, and from the statements made by counsel in argument, that, before any attack was made upon the petition by the defendant, it contained two counts, and that the court upon the defendant’s motion ordered the counts to be divided at a different place from the division made by the pleader. Why this was done we are unable to discover, and whether the plaintiff was prejudiced thereby we cannot determine. Then there was a motion made to strike out the second count, which was sustained. A motion to require the plaintiff to divide,the first count was sustained, and a motion to strike out certain allegations of the petition was sustained. The necessity for all these motions is not apparent in the abstract, and it is marvelous that there .should have been so much difficulty in presenting to the court a plain case for a personal injury. Why there should have been any statement of two groups of facts in separate counts we cannot discover, and the petition does not state any reason therefor. Counsel for defendant claim that much of this trouble arose from the fact that the pleader persisted in setting forth evidence in the petition, instead of the issuable facts in his case, and that this was done that counsel might read the pleading “again and again before the jury,” with voice modulated with a good degree of impressiveness.

We think the court did not err in the orders striking out parts of the pleading, because the parts stricken out were in no sense necessary to the maintenance of the action. .And as we have come to the conclusion that there must be a retrial of the cause for other reasons, we leave this petition, with the simple remark that a petition in an action for a personal [58]*58injury ought not, ordinarily, to be divided into counts, and that defendant’s motion requiring the first count to be divided should not have been sustained. The motion and tho ruling appear to have been on the theory that an allegation that defendant’s employes were negligent in the first instance, and that they were negligent in not taking projjer steps to protect decedent against the peril after it was discovered, should be stated in two counts. This, we think, was wholly unnecessary, but whether it was any prejudice to the plaintiff, we are unable to determine. The fact that, in the face of all this confusion in the pleadings, the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff1, would rather indicate that the plaintiff was not prejudiced by any ruling upon the pleadings.

2. verdict: special iindr gvnerafvermeíii ni such 0<lse' II. As has already been stated, the decedent attempted to uncouple the cars while they were in motion. There was a flat-car loaded with lumber next to the tender of the engine, and the attempt was made to pull ^e P*11 an(l uncouple this flat-car, and thus separate the engine from the other cars composing the train. The plaintiff claimed that the decedent was ordered by the engineer to come down from the top of the car and pull the pin and separate the train. As applicable to this, and other facts in the case, the court, at the instance of the defendant, submitted to the jury certain interrogatories, which, with the answers thereto, are as follows: “1. Did the brakeman, Hammer, know, before he attempted to uncouple the tender from the train, that the train was to stop at Colfax, and that the engine was to take water there ? Answer. Yes.

“2. Did the brakeman, Hammer, know that it was the intention of the engineer to stop said train before it reached the mouth of the passing switch ? A. Yes.

“i. At what speed was the train moving when Hammer passed in between the tender and car, and attempted to uncouple the tender from the car ? A. About four miles.

“5. Was it unusually hazardous and dangerous for the [59]*59brakeman, Hammer, to attempt to so uncouple the tender from the train while it was in motion ? A. No.

“6. Was it unusually hazardous and dangerous for the brakeman, Hammer, to attempt to so uncouple* the tender from the train while it was moving at the rate of speed that you shall determine % A. No.

“10. Hid fireman, Perigo, see Hammer at the time he fell between the cars ? A. Tes.

“11. Did the fireman, as he saw Hammer fall, say to the engineer, “Billy is killed,” or that in substance ? A. Yes.

“12. Did the engineer instantly, upon hearing this explanation (exclamation), reverse his engine and put on steam ? A. Yes.

“15. Are you able to determine from the evidence at what point of the distance over which the train ran, after Hammer fell, he received the fatal injury % A. No.”

The defendant filed a motion for a judgment, notwithstanding the general verdict, upon the ground that the special findings were inconsistent with the general verdict, and that the special findings show that the defendant was not chargeable with negligence, and show that decedent was guilty of contributory negligence.

At the same time, and subject to this motion, the defendant filed its motion in arrest of judgment and for a new trial. The motion for judgment for defendant was overruled, and the motion for a new trial was sustained. The rulings upon these motions were made in general terms, without specifying the grounds' thereof. Afterwards, the plaintiff filed a motion to vacate the order setting aside the general verdict and granting a new trial, and, in case the order be not vacated, that it he modified so as to show the grounds upon which it was sustained. Hpon this motion the .following ruling was made:

“Now on this day this cause comes on to be heard on the motion of plaintiff to vacate and set aside the order heretofore made hérein, to-wit, on the 16th day of January, 1882, sus[60]*60taining the defendant’s motion for a new trial. And the court, having inspected the records, sustains said motion; and it is ordered that the entry on said ruling be set aside and modified as hereinafter shown, to which ruling defendant at the time excepted, and thereujDon it is ordered as a substitute for said order so set aside that the said .motion of defendant for a new trial be, and the same is hereby sustained as -to the first, second, third, and fourth grounds thereof, to which ruling plaintiff at the time excepted, and, as to the remainder of said motion, the same is by the court overruled. To which ruling the defendant at the time excepted, said defendant at the same time also objecting to dividing said motion by its ruling, and excepting to the act of such division, as well as the overruling of the portion of said motions so overruled.”.

The grounds therein numbered 1, 2, 3, and 4, are as follows :

“1. The general verdict of the jury is inconsistent with the special findings returned by the jury.

u2. The special findings of the jury show a state of facts deduced from the evidence negativing the general verdict.

“3. The special findings show the act complained of in the count uj>on which the verdict is based not to have been negligent.

. “4.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W. 597, 61 Iowa 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammer-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-ry-co-iowa-1883.