McBride v. Des Moines City Railway Co.

109 N.W. 618, 134 Iowa 398
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 109 N.W. 618 (McBride v. Des Moines City 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
McBride v. Des Moines City Railway Co., 109 N.W. 618, 134 Iowa 398 (iowa 1906).

Opinion

McClain, C. J.

The facts appearing in the record which are essential to the determination of the questions of law raised on this appeal are as follows: Plaintiff’s intestate was a member of the paid fire department of the city of Des Moines, and in response to a fire alarm, about half past ten in the morning, with eight other members of the department, he started on a hose wagon from the'fire station on Eighth street going north. One Nagle was the driver of the wagon. Plaintiff’s intestate rode in his proper place on a: running board or step on the west side of the wagon, facing east and near the rear end. As the wagon approached the crossing of Grand avenue running east and west, on which there was a double track of defendant’s railway, the driver saw a car coming from the west, and without checking the speed of the wagon drove on across the track on which the car was approaching. The car struck the rear wheel on the west side of the wagon, and deceased was violently thrown to the pavement and his skull was fractured. From this injury he died within a few hours.

1. Negligence-instructions. I. After stating very elaborately and in great detail the claims of the parties as to the facts bearing upon the question of the negligence of the defendant’s motorman, in charge of the car which collided with the hose -wagon on which plaintiff’s intestate was riding, and defining negligence, the court instructed the jury to consider “ whether or not the motorman having charge of the running and operating of the car in question was negligent or not in not stopping or checking the speed of the car before the collision with the fire hose wagon occurred ” ; and he then proceeded to detail a variety of circumstances which the evidence for plaintiff tended to establish, such as the clearness and calmness of the day, the ringing of the bell on the hose wagon, and the distance at which such bell might be heard, the rate of speed of the wagon, etc., none of which [401]*401were controlling on the question of the motorman’s negligence. And he concluded the instruction with this sentence:

After carefully considering these facts, if they be facts, and all other facts and circumstances proved on the trial, if you believe from a preponderance -of the evidence that the motorman by the use of the means at his command could have stopped the car, or checked the speed thereof, in time to have avoided the accident, and that he failed to do so, that would be negligence on his part; and his negligence, if he was so negligent, would be the negligence of the defendant, and your verdict should be for the plaintiff, unless you find the deceased, B. McBride, was negligent, and that his own negligence contributed to his injury in any degree, in which case you would find for the .defendant.

The first objection urged to this instruction as a whole is that therein the court called to the attention of the jury the facts which the evidence tended to establish favorable to plaintiff’s recovery, and omitted special reference to those relating to defendant’s theory of the accident. This objection we think was well taken. An instruction was asked bn behalf of defendant, calling attention to other circumstances which the evidence tended to establish, which should have been considered as bearing on the motorman’s negligence, and which were favorable to defendant’s contentions in the case. It was clearly improper for the court to thus emphasize the circumstances from which negligence might be inferred, and omit any reference to circumstances tending to support the opposite inference. Perhaps the court might properly have omitted to catalogue the circumstances which the testimony tended to establish bearing on the question of negligence, and simply have referred in a general way to the facts and circumstances proved on the trial. But in suggesting to the jury that they should take into consideration some of the circumstances which were favorable to the plaintiff, and omitting reference to others favorable to defendant, he put the case unfairly to the jury.

[402]*4022. SAME. Another serious objection to the instruction is that the portion thereof above set out withdraws from the jury the question whether the motorman was negligent in not stopping the car or checking the speed thereof in time to have avoided the accident. There could be no question under the evidence as to the ability of the motorman by the use of the means at his command to stop the car or check the speed thereof in time to have avoided the accident, if he had endeavored to do so a sufficient length of time before the accident occurred, nor was there any doubt that he failed to stop the car or check its speed so as to prevent the result of a collision; and the court specifically instructs the jury that this ability on the part of the motorman and his failure to act constituted negligence. The real question in the case was, not- whether the motorman could have stopped the car, but whether he was negligent in not doing so; and this was a question for the jury, and not for the court. Had the evidence shown without controversy that the motorman, in the exercise of care, could and should have anticipated the collision long’ enough beforehand to enable him to stop the car or check its speed so as to avoid the accident, then the instruction might have been correct. But the facts were in dispute. There were circumstances supporting either conclusion, and the question of negligence should have been left to the jury.

It is no answer to this position to say that in the first part of the instruction the jury were told that they must consider whether or not the motorman was negligent in not stopping or checking the speed of the car. After this general statement, the court proceeded to enumerate a large number of circumstances indicating that the motorman was negligent, and then told the jury that if these circumstances were found to be established, and they believed from these and other circumstances proved on the trial that the motorman could have stopped the car, he was negligent. It was ’not the physical ability of the motorman to stop or check [403]*403the speed of the car that was in question, but his failure to use due care. The instructions as a whole are lengthy and intricate in their statements, and the one now specially under consideration is particularly obscure, and the bald statement at its conclusion that the motorman was negligent if he could have stopped-or checked the speed of the car in time to avoid the accident, and failed to do so, may very well have been seized upon by the jury as the solution of the whole difficulty. We reach the conclusion that in the two respects pointed out the instruction was erroneous and misleading.

3. Street railways negligence: evidence admissibiiity. II. Over the defendant’s objection the court allowed the plaintiff to introduce in evidence a section of the city ordinance relating to the fire department as follows: “ Sec. 353. Fire Department Not to be Obstructed, Sec. 8. The engines, hose carriages, officers, men and apparatus of the fire department, shall have the right of way while going to and at any fire, and any person willfully obstructing the firemen in the performance of their duty shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and be liable to punishment for such offense.” And the court refused on plaintiff’s objection to allow the defendant to introduce a section of the city ordinance relating to the operation by defendant of its street cars as follows: “ Sec. 1304. Penalty. Sec. 8.

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Bluebook (online)
109 N.W. 618, 134 Iowa 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-des-moines-city-railway-co-iowa-1906.