Watters v. City of Waterloo

101 N.W. 871, 126 Iowa 199
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 101 N.W. 871 (Watters v. City of Waterloo) 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
Watters v. City of Waterloo, 101 N.W. 871, 126 Iowa 199 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Bishop, J. — ■

1. Election of causes. Appellant complains of the ruling of the court upon its motion to require plaintiff to elect as between the counts of his petition. We think there was no error. A separate cause of action was pleaded in each count and certainly under our Practice Code a plaintiff may plead as many causes of action of the same general character as he may possess.

2. proximate cause. II. In the fourteenth paragraph of the charge the court told the jury, in substance, that if the plaintiff received an injury in December, 1900, as alleged, one of the effects of which was Occasional spells of dizziness; and, further, if on January 17, 1901, while on his way home he became dizzy, and this was the result of his previous fall and injury, and because thereof he fell and sustained injury as alleged, and that he would not have so fallen hut for such dizziness •— then in law the last fall would be the result of the first fall, unless an adequate intervening cause for such last fall was found by the jury. In the fifteenth paragraph an intervening cause is defined as:

A cause which intervenes between a first and subsequent act which produced the last effect; but to relieve the wrongdoer from the effects of his first act which it is claimed caused the last result, the intervening cause must be an adequate one. The intervening cause, if any, in this case is that which caused the fall of plaintiff on Chestnut street, viz., the alleged unsafe condition of the walk at that place. Yon are instructed that if t^e condition of that walk on Chestnut street was such that it would probably have caused the fall of plaintiff while in the exercise of ordinary care himself, independent of the fact, if it be a fact, that plaintiff was dizzy at the time, then it would be an adequate intervening cause, and the injury at that place and time would not be the natural result of the fall of plaintiff on the 24th of December, in which case the defendant will not he liable for said last fall as the result,of the first fall. •

The giving of such instructions is assigned as error. And it is the contention of counsel for appellant that in no [202]*202event was there warrant for a finding that, as between the alleged negligence in December and the fall and injury in January, the relation was such as to give character to the former as the natural and proximate cause of the latter. This-contention, we think, must be sustained. Dor the purposes of the present consideration, it may be assumed that the December fall was brought about by negligence on the part of the defendant city,- that, as a direct result of such fall, plaintiff was subjected to occasional spells of dizziness; that he was suddenly seized with such a spell on the occasion of his January accident; and that while thus afflicted, and in attempting to save himself by sitting down, he slipped and fell, with the result as alleged by him. Such fact assumption, it will be observed, comprehends the entire case as related to'the instructions of which complaint is made. Now, clearly enough, an approval of such instructions — and they may be considered together — would necessitate our reaching the conclusion, evidently reached by the trial court, that the facts warranted a finding to the effect that a direct and unbroken causal relationship existed between the alleged negligence of December and the accident of January, and that the result as complained of was one that ought reasonably to have been anticipated by the defendant. This we are unable to do. In the law of negligence it is fundamental doctrine that the injury and damage alleged must be shown to have been the natural and direct or proximáte consequence’ of the wrongful act complained of, and the direct or proximate consequences of a wrongful act are those that immediately follow upon its commission. This is not to be taken as saying that the term “ proximate ” as used in this connection must be understood as meaning closeness or nearness in point of time, or in the physical sequence of events; it means closeness or nearness in point of causal relation. Watson on Personal Injuries, section 32. In general terms, it may be said to be the rule of the cases that the causa próxima is sufficiently established if the facts are so far con[203]*203nected in orderly sequence as that it can be fairly said that, in the absence of the cause alleged, the injury and damage complained of would not have occurred. Liming v. Railway, 81 Iowa, 246; McClain v. Gardon Grove, 83 Iowa, 235; Ward v. Railway, 97 Iowa, 50; Parmenter v. Marion, 113 Iowa, 297. It follows as a matter of course that, when the line of causation has been brollen by the intervention of some efficient, independent cause, such intervening cause must be accepted as the proximate cause, and in an action against the original wrongdoer the law will not undertake to further pursue the question or resulting damage. To avail the original wrongdoer as a defense, however, the intervening cause must be both independent and responsible of itself. To quote from a learned author: “ The true conception is that the train of causes is not broken, so as to relieve the originator of the first cause from responsibility for the result, unless the independent cause which intervened was, of itself, sufficient to produce the result, in which Case the law regards it, and not the antecedent cause, as the proximate cause.” Thompson on Negligence, section 54 (2d Ed.).

In many of the cases it is stated — and we think the statement sound upon reason as well as authority — that the test of proximate cause is whether the injury and damage exhibited are such in character as that, in view of the cause originally set in motion, such injury and damage ought to have been apticipated as likely to occur. This, indeed, is but a reiteration of a principle which runs through the law of torts generally. One is held to a responsibility for the natural and probable consequences of his acts, because such are conclusively presumed to have been within his intention. He cannot be held to answer for results not within the probable, and hence, in the exercise of reasonable care, could not have been foreseen. That the particular injury complained of in a given case was unthought of by the wrongdoer, and hence not foreseen in point of fact, is, of course, immaterial. If within the probable, he cannot be heard to assert a want [204]*204of intention. Doyle v. Railway, 77 Iowa, 607; Glanz v. Railway, 119 Iowa, 611; Christianson v. Railway, 67 Minn. 94 (69 N. W. Rep. 640); Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 251; Railway v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469 (24 L. Ed. 256). Tbat it is not always easy to trace the line of causation must be apparent. It may be said, indeed, that the books are replete with cases which tend to confuse rather than to make clear. Manifestly the question is not one of science or of legal knowledge; it is to be determined in each case as a fact,^and this in view of the attending circumstances of fact. Railway v. Kellogg, supra. And, invoking a familiar rule, where the circumstances are such that reasonable minds may reach different conclusions, the question is one for the jury; otherwise it is to be determined by the court. As each case will present fact conditions varying in greater or less degree from others, which have arisen, it follows of necessity that a determination in each must be-made largely to rest upon its own facts.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.W. 871, 126 Iowa 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watters-v-city-of-waterloo-iowa-1904.