Ingebretsen v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad

176 Iowa 74
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 176 Iowa 74 (Ingebretsen v. Minneapolis & St. Louis 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
Ingebretsen v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad, 176 Iowa 74 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

On March 2,1913, the plaintiff, a young man of 20 years of age, loaded a ear of cattle at Sheffield, Iowa, for shipment over defendant’s line of railway to Chicago, Illinois. Plaintiff accompanied the shipment, taking passage upon the caboose or way car attached to the freight train. Arriving at Steamboat Eock, a station upon the defendant’s road in Hardin County, the train was stopped and the engine detached therefrom for some purpose, leaving the train standing upon the main line. While waiting thus for the return of the engine, another freight train following upon the main track came from the north at a high rate of speed and crashed with great violence into the rear of the standing train, occasioning a very serious wreck, destroying the way car, killing two of its occupants and inflicting very serious injuries upon [78]*78plaintiff. After alleging these matters, the petition states further that plaintiff was cut, maimed, bruised and wounded about the head, arms, legs and body; that the right leg was broken at or near the ankle joint; that he suffered a compound fracture of the bones of the left leg; that one of his fingers was broken; that he was cut about the head and scalp and on his chin and cheeks; was bruised on his arms and back, and received a violent shock to his nervous system, causing him to suffer great physical pain and mental anguish, which effect will continue for his lifetime. He further says that his injuries are permanent and have made him a cripple, without having any use of his left leg, while the right leg is weak and gives out after a few hours’ use. He charges that the wreck and his consequent injuries were caused by the negligence of defendant in several respects, which, for reasons hereinafter shown, require no particular statement. Upon the showing thus made, he demands a recovery of damages in the sum of $30,000. *

The defendant, answering, admits that plaintiff was injured while a passenger upon its train, admits that such injury was occasioned by the negligence of its employes and that it is liable to the plaintiff for damages so sustained, but denies that his injuries are as serious or the resulting damages as great as stated in the petition. In an amendment filed at the time of the trial, defendant “denies that plaintiff was injured in the manner, nature and extent claimed in the petition.”

From this statement of the issues, it will be seen that the dispute between the parties turned solely upon the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injuries, and the amount of damages he was entitled to recover. These questions having been submitted to the jury upon the evidence and the charge of the court, a verdict was returned assessing the damages at $19,000. Thereafter, the court, holding that the amount was excessive, gave the plaintiff the option to remit $5,000 from [79]*79the amount of the verdict and accept judgment in the sum of $14,000, and, this condition being complied with, defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled and judgment entered.

We have, then, to consider whether the record shows any reversible error necessitating a new trial. Appellant’s counsel at the outset concede that they find it difficult to designate ■“individual and specific errors” which one may say influenced •or misled the jury into returning a large verdict, but they attribute such result rather to the cumulative effect of all the mistakes and adverse rulings of the court below. Following as well as we can the specific complaints mentioned in the .argument, they are as follows:

1. pleading: amendment: conforming: issues to facts proved: discretion of court. I. Plaintiff’s petition as drawn, and as it stood at the •close of the evidence, did not allege in so many words that Ms injuries were permanent, and he was then allowed to amend his petition by adding such allegation. This ' ruling is excepted to by appellant as an abuse of discretion by the trial court. There are * suffioie^ reasons why the exception cannot be sustained. In the first place, the practice -of allowing amendments to conform the issues to the evidence .is one for which there is not only statutory authority, but the authority of a large and familiar line of precedents. In the next place, we are not at all convinced that it needed any amendment to the petition to permit the introduction of the evidence or to allow the jury to find the injuries permanent and return a verdict accordingly.

2. juey: chai- for causee-nfxemptory feffect, II. In empaneling the jury, one H. J. Pals was called into the box, who, upon his examination, stated that he was a neighbor and friend of plaintiff’s, and, after going somewhat minutely into the relations between plaintiff and juror and into his present feelings and opinions, the appellant challenged him for cause, and, the challenge being overruled, then challenged him peremptorily, and the juror [80]*80did not sit upon the trial. Error is assigned for the alleged reason that the action of the court compelled appellant to use his last peremptory challenge in order to remove the juror from the panel.

No rule of the kind contended for has ever been recognized by this court, and we think it equally unknown to courts in general. The statute provides for each litigant five peremptory challenges. This number the legislature apparently deemed sufficient to protect the average party in his right to an impartial jury; for, after having removed all jurors against whom he can show cause for challenge, he is still permitted to exercise five additional challenges without cause, and these he may use in removing any of the twelve first drawn into the box, or in removing any of those who may be called in later to fill vacancies. It may be wise strategy for counsel to keep one of his challenges in reserve as long as he can, because of the possibility that a juror may yet be drawn whom he regards as more undesirable than any of those in the box, and the reserved challenge, may be useful in removing him; but this is a matter upon which each party must take his chances. So, also, if a challenge for cause which ought to be sustained is erroneously overruled, there is no prejudice to the challenger if he still has the opportunity to get rid of the objectionable juror by peremptory challenge. This has so often been held by the courts as not to be open to debate. It follows of necessity that, where the party has the opportunity to exclude the juror by peremptory challenge, and does in fact so remove him, the overruling of the challenge for cause will afford no ground for reversal of the judgment finally rendered. See State v. Foster, 136 Iowa 527, and cases there cited. The case before us is, in all respects, within both the spirit and the letter of the established rule, and defendant is without legal ground for complaint.

[81]*813. pleading : issue, proof and variance: admission of eviteriaianégaousiyadmñted. [80]*80III. The plaintiff was allowed to prove the manner, circumstances and incidents of the wreck in which he was [81]*81injured. In so doing, photographs of the wrecked train and its surroundings were identified and put in evidence. To this, defendant has excepted, . • f0r the reason that the answer admits liability, aucl evidence so admitted.has no tendency to prove the nature or extent of plaintiff’s injuries, or the amount of compensation to which he is entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
176 Iowa 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingebretsen-v-minneapolis-st-louis-railroad-iowa-1915.