Stockwell v. C. C. & D. R.

43 Iowa 470
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 13, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 43 Iowa 470 (Stockwell v. C. C. & D. R.) 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
Stockwell v. C. C. & D. R., 43 Iowa 470 (iowa 1876).

Opinion

Beck, J.

The verdict was set aside by the court below solely on the ground of the misconduct of the defendant. While plaintiff claims in his motion that the verdict was in conflict with the evidence and the law, as given the jury by the court, this point is not relied upon in this court. Indeed, we understand counsel for plaintiff to admit that the case is not [472]*472one which demands interference with the verdict on the ground that it wants the support of evidence. The abstract upon which the case is presented here was not prepared to present that question.

It is urged that several motions are presented in the abstract, which show separate acts amounting to misconduct of jurors trying the case, and that plaintiff was guilty of misconduct participated in by some of the jurors, which vitiates the verdict. The ground of complaint last referred to w.e will first consider, and inquire whether it presents sufficient justification of the ruling of the court in setting aside the verdict. The like consideration and inquiry will be made in proper order, concerning the other grounds of objection to the verdict.

I. It becomes necessary to state quite briefly the issues between the parties and certain evidence introduced thereon.

The lumber burned was in the yard of plaintiff about or near,his saw mill. The fire originated in the night, no very great time after a train upon defendant’s road had passed. The railroad passes near the mill and through the lumber yard, that is, the lumber yard is upon both sides of the road. The main issue involved the fact of the fire originating from the locomotive, the plaintiff claiming to show by circumstances that it did, and defendant introducing the same kind of proof to establish that it did not. One of the circumstances relied upon by defendant was, that the locomotive, which was drawing a train of more than thirty cars, passed the mill and lumber yard without the use of steam, and persons accustomed to handle engines, and familiar with railroads and their operation, testified that engines using coal for fuel, which was the kind of fuel used by the locomotive which passed the lumber yard just before the property was burned, never communicated fire along the road when steam was not used. It was an important question of fact whether the locomotive alleged to have set the fire did actually use steam at the place on that occasion. Plaintiff’s testimony tended to prove that it did and defendant’s proof tended the other way. The evidence on this point was conflicting. But the evidence clearly estab[473]*473lishes that trains had passed the point without the use of steam. The engineer operating the locomotive on the night, of the fire testified at the trial that he shut off steam at a place designated as Eock Cut, which was upon or at the head of a descending grade, and from that point ran past plaintiff’s lumber yard and mill without the use 'of steam. As we have just said, the evidence of witnesses on-behalf of plaintiff contradicted this witness for defendant and others testifying to. the same fact. But the possibility o.f a train running from Eock Cut past the mill and lumber yard by its own momentum, after shutting off steam, is not contradicted by plaintiff’s witnesses. Indeed, plaintiff himself testifies that it has been done since the fire, though he never saw it before. We may therefore say that the possibility of a train running past the lumber yard without the use of steam, in the manner testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses, cannot be questioned upon the evidence submitted to the jury.

1. practice : jury. By the consent of the parties and the sanction of the court, the jury were permitted to make an inspection of the railroad and the locality of the fire. For this purpose a tram, or locomotive and two cars, were provided by the defendant. The deputy sheriff, a witness who was the engineer that established the grades of the road, and certain employes of defendant in charge of the train, accompanied the jury on the excursion. It was agreed that the attorneys of the parties should accompany the jury. Defendant’s counsel did go upon the train, but, for some reason, plaintiff’s did not. The train passed over the road from Eock Cut to a point beyond the lumber yard and mill once or twice. It was stopped at the locality of the fire, and the jury inspected the ground.

It is alleged that defendant’s employes in charge of the train tested the practicability of running from Eock Cut past • the lumber yard without using steam and actually did accomplish it, which was known to some of the jurors. The experiment, as it is called by counsel, is the ground upon which the plaintiff charges misbehavior of defendant’s employes, participated in by the jurors or some of them.

[474]*474All that the jurors could possibly have learned by the experiment was, that it was practicable for a train to run from Eock Out to a point beyond plaintiff’s mill and lumber yard without the use of steam. This fact the evidence established beyond dispute. There could have resulted, therefore, no possible prejudice to plaintiff. Conceding that the experiment was improper, it was innocent in its effects. We cannot punish defendant for the unlawful act of their employes that wrought injury to no one. In the view, therefore, that no possible prejudice was wrought plaintiff in the trial, by the act complained of, it afforded no ground for disturbing the verdict.

We are not prepared to hold that the experiment itself was not proper and unauthorized by the law. The jury were, by the consent of the parties and the order of the court, in a position where they could satisfy themselves upon a question of fact which they were required to determine, namely, the practicability of a train running without steam on the part of the railroad indicated. The truth could be unerringly reached by the experiment. Even did the evidence leave the question in uncertainty, they ought to have used the- means at hand to arrive at the truth. The question involved is a physical fact. Its solution by the experiment would leave no chance for error in judgment or opinion. Why not employ the experi-ment to reach the truth, the end and aim of all trials at law? The ease is not unlike many we could state where common sense, and doubtless the rules of law, would permit experiments before the jury for the purpose of determining a disputed fact. Suppose experts should differ as to the effect of the union of two chemical bodies; what objection could exist to an experiment before the jury to determine the true result? Suppose a question arose in a case as to the weight of a gold. coin, the witnesses of the parties giving conflicting evidence on the subject. Why not weigh it in the presence of the jury? Or, suppose an alteration in a deed can only be determined by the use of artificial assistance to the eye. Why should not jurors be permitted to use such aids to enable them to decide the case in accord with the very truth? But the questions here presented we do not determine. We suggest [475]*475these thoughts to show that there are arguments based upon the high considerations of justice and truth in support of the propriety of the* alleged experiment, if made fairly by the jury and not in disobedience to the directions of the court governing their conduct, while in charge of the deputy sheriff.

The District Court regarded the experiment in question as misbehavior on the part of defendant, sufficient to require the verdict to be set aside, and upon this ground alone was the order to that effect made.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Iowa 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockwell-v-c-c-d-r-iowa-1876.