v.
The Burlington & Northwestern Railway Company and the Burlington & Western Railway Company
Lead Opinion
At tbe time of the injury complained of, plaintiff was a child of the age of about sis years. He lived with his father upon the residence property owned by the latter, bordering upon the defendant’s right of way. This residence lot was inclosed by a fence, and that portion of it adjoining the right of way was used as a garden. By the consent of the father the railway company had for several years (during the winter season, at least) maintained a snoAV fence within the limits of his inclosure. The boundary fence between the right of way and the garden appears to have been constructed of posts and wire. The snow fence was made of boards, in panels of 14 or 16 feet in length. These panels were set on top of the ground, just inside the garden inclosure, and leaned up against the wire fence. 'To hold them in place, the ordinary method employed was to fasten the ends of the panels together with wire loops of some kind, and attach the top board or boards in the same manner to the fence posts. The evidence tends to show that a snow fence was thus constructed in the fall of 1899. On April 8, 1900, the plaintiff, with a brother about a year younger than himself, went into the garden to look at some pieplant roots or sprouts near the fence; and while there the wind blew over one or more of the board panels, one of which fell upon the plaintiff, injuring him very severely. The negligence charged against the defendant consists in [*485] its alleged failure to give tbe panels a sufficient slant to prevent their falling or being blown inward upon the garden, and in fastening them to the standing fence with rotten, defective, and insecure wires or other material. There was evidence tending to sustain the charge that the wire made use of for this purpose was old, rusty, and defective. On the part of the defendant there was evidence tending to show that the fence had been fastened in the preceding November with new, bright, galvanized wire, and that all reasonable precautions had been taken to build the snow fence securely. There was also evidence from which the conclusion might have been reached that earlier in the day of April 8th these children had found the panels blown down, and had themselves lifted them back into position against the wire fence, from which they were again blown down at the time of the accident to plaintiff. The facts thus stated, with such as ma|y be incidentally referred to in the further progress of this opinion, are sufficient to indicate the bearing of the several points presented by the appeal.
IV. The defendants asked the court to instruct the jufiy as follows:
4. Negligence: proximate cause; intervening act. If you find from the evidence that prior to the accident the panel of fence which caused the injury to plaintiff had fallen to the ground from some unknown cause, and that the plaintiff, finding it there, with the assistance of a brother raised the same to near its former position, and left it there without fastening, and that later on the same day, while walking near the panel and on the land of their father, from the wind or some other unknown cause that panel fell upon the plaintiff, causing the injuries complained of, or some of them, then plaintiff cannot recover for those injuries, and your verdict should be for the defendants.
This request was overruled. Upon the fact proposition here referred to, the court, upon its own motion, said to the jury:
If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff and his brother, the same day the accident occurred, raised a panel of the snow fence that had fallen, and leaned it against the permanent fence or the other panels of the snow fence, and the same was left by plaintiff and his brother in that condition, without any fastening to the permanent fence, and afterwards the same day the plaintiff went near such panel, and the same fell over on him, and if you find that plaintiff had sufficient capacity to understand and appreciate the danger surrounding him at the time of the accident, then he would be guilty of contributory negligence, and in that event he cannot recover, notwithstanding defendants [*489] may have been negligent in tbe erection and construction of the snow fence.
At the request of plaintiff, an additional instruction was given as follows:
You are further instructed that if you should find the plaintiff, Marion Fishburn, did, prior to the time of the accident, aid in raising and placing as aforesaid the panel that fell upon him, or that contributed to the falling of the panel as alleged, you shall then consider the childish instincts of the plaintiff, his mental powers, judgment, discretion, and want of discretion at .his age, and you will charge and hold him responsible only to the degree of caution and prudence under the same conditions generally possessed and exercised bfy a child of his age and experience under all the circumstances as disclosed by the evidence in the case.
The instructions given and refused, as here noted, require a consideration of the question of the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff. It is argued by the appellants that, even if defendants were negligent, in the construction of the fence, that negligence ceased to be a source of danger to any one when the panels were blown down or fell to the ground; and if the fallen panels were, without the knowledge or agency of the defendants, lifted back against the wire fence, from which position they fell upon the plaintiff, such act constitutes a sufficient intervening cause which relieves them from liability .for the resulting injury. We have already reached the conclusion that there was evidence to sustain a finding of negligence on part of the defendants in construction of the snow fence, and that if, by reason of such negligence, the fence fell or was blown upon the plaintiff without fault chargeable to him, he is entitled to recover. From this starting point, let us proceed to inquire how the situation would be affected if the jurjy believed, as it might have done, under the evidence, that plaintiff and his young brother had found the panels upon the ground, [*490] and lifted them back into or near their original position, before the accident. In other words, assuming the negligence of the defendants in the construction of the snow fence, would the act of plaintiff and his brother in lifting- the fallen panels and restoring them to their place without proper fastening be such an independent intervening cause as will break or interrupt the causal connection between defendants’ negligence and the plaintiff’s injury? The mere fact that another cause intervened between defendants’ negligence and plaintiff’s injury is not enough to relieve the former from liability if the intervening act was of such nature that its happening was to have been apprehended. Stated otherwise, the intervening cause will not relieve the .original negligence of its actionable quality if the occurrence of the former might have been anticipated. Thompson, Negligence (1st Ed.) 1089; Sheridan v. R. R., 36 N. Y. 39 (93 Am. Dec. 490); Osage v. Larkin, 40 Kan. 206 (19 Pac. Rep. 658, 2 L. R. A. 56, 10 Am. St. Rep. 186); Derry v. Flitner, 118 Mass. 131; Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 259; Schumaker v. R. R., 46 Minn. 39 (48 N. W. Rep. 559, 12 L. R. A. 257); Lynch v. Nurdin, 1 Q. B. 29; Birge v. Gardner, 19 Conn. 507 (50 Am. Dec. 261). For instance, in Binford v. Johnston, 82 Ind. 426 (42 Am. Rep. 508), the defendant sold loaded cartridges to two young boys. With these cartridges the boys loaded a toy pistol already in their possession, which weapon they left upon the floor of their home. Afterward a younger brother, six years of age, picked up the pistol and discharged it, receiving a wound from which he died. Plere, in one sense of the word, the original negligence of the defendant had ceased to be operative. He did not furnish or load or discharge the pistol. The boys to whom he had sold the cartridges, and were the intermediate agents in loading the weapon, had discarded it. Lying where it had been left by them, it was harmless. The child, in picking it up, became an active agent in its own destruction. But conceding all this, the court held the defendant- liable, [*491] saying: “ Altbongb the act of the lad' intervened between the original wrong and the injury, we cannot deny a recovery if we find that the injury was the natural or probable result of appellant’s original wrong.”
While the facts in the cited case present a more flagrant act of negligence than is charged against the appellants in the case before us, the difference is one of degree only. The legal principle which applies to the former is equally applicable to the latter. We cannot say, as a matter of law, that the lifting of the fallen panels back to their original position was an occurrence which the defendants could not and ought not to have anticipated. So far as appears from the record, defendants had no right to occupy any part of the garden except that which was covered by the snow fence, and they must have foreseen that the panels could not fall without encroaching upon that part of the grounds over which they had no control. If the owner of the garden or any person of mature years interested therein had discovered the prostrate panels, and restored them to their position against the wire fence, and had thereafter been injured by reason of such panels being again blown down, he might possibly be precluded from a recover^ of damages on the ground of contributory negligence; but we feel very certain his act would not be such an independent intervening cause, disconnected .from the primary act complained of, and not reasonably to have been anticipated by the defendants, as would be required to relieve the latter from liability for negligence in the original construction. Assuming that the fence had already fallen when the children first visited the place on the day of the accident, the situation would indicate that the panel must have been lying upon the pieplant which they were seeking. They had the right to remove the obstruction thus created, and the natural suggestion, to the mind of a mature person even, would be to lift the fallen-section back to its place against the wire fence, where the defendants had placed it. Indeed, it is hardly going too [*492] far to say that the situation thus created by the defendants was in the nature of an invitation to do the very thing which it is claimed these children did. At any rate, we think it was a fair question for the jury whether such acts and such results were not reasonably to have been anticipated by the defendants as likely to follow a negligent construction of the snow fence. The liability of a person charged with liegligence does not depend upon the question whether, with the exercise of reasonable prudence, he could or ought to have foreseen the very injury complained of; but he may be held liable for anything which, after the inj 1117- is complete, appears to have been a natural and probable consequence of his act Gilson v. Delaware C. Co., 65 Vt. 213 (26 Atl. Rep. 70, 36 Am. St. Rep, 810); Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 251; Bunting v. Hogsett, 139 Pa. 363 (21 Atl. Rep. 31, 33, 34, 12 L. R. A. 268, 23 Am. St Rep. 192); Higgins v. Dewey, 107 Mass. 494 (9 Am. Rep. 63); Brown v. R. Co., 54 Wis. 342 (11 N. W. Rep. 356, 911, 41 Am. Rep. 41); Louisville R. Co. v. Wood, 113 Ind. 544 (14 N. R. Rep. 572, 16 N. E. Rep. 197); Savage v. R. Co., 31 Minn. 419 (18 N. W. Rep. 272); R. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 475 (24 L. Ed. 256). See, also, Burk v. Creamery P. Co. 126 Iowa 730. In his note to the Gilson Case, supra,, Mr. Freeman quotes from this court, West v. Ward, 77 Iowa, 323, as follows: “When there is danger of a particular injury which actually occurs, we must surely say that it is the usual, ordinary, natural, and probable result of the act of exposing the person or thing injured to the danger.” The annotator adds: “ If we construe this principle with the one stated in the preceding paragraph [that the injury must be one which might reasonably have been anticipated], the'result seems to be that when the act complained of was such that, in view, of all the circumstances, it might not improbably cause damage of some kind, the doer of the act cannot shelter himself under the defense that the actual consequence was one which rarely follows from that par [*493] ticular act.” To the same effect see Quigley v. R. R., 142 Pa, 388 (21 Atl. Rep. 827, 24 Am. St. Rep. 504); Henry v. Dennis, 93 Ind. 452 (47 Am. Rep. 378); Page v. Bucksport, 64 Me. 51 (18 Am. Rep. 239); Sauter v. R. R., 66 N. Y. 50 (23 Am. Rep. 18).
No leading English case has been oftener cited with approval by our courts than Lynch v. Nurdin, supra. There the defendant negligently left his horse and cart standing unfastened in the public street. A child climbed into the cart, when another child set the animal in motion, upsetting the vehicle. In the resulting accident, the first child was [*495] injured, and action was brought against the owner of the horse and cart to recover damages. It was there held that by reason of its youth the injured, child was not chargeable -with contributory negligence, and that the act of the other child in causing the animal to move was not such an intervening cause of the accident as to relieve the defendant. The same principle controls the decision in Binford v. Johnston, supra,, decided by the Indiana court. So, also, in Abbott v. McFie and Hughes v. McFie, 2 Hurl. & G. 744. In these cases the defendant’s servants negligently stood a heavy shutter on end, with the top leaning against the outer wall of a building. A small child meddled'with the shutter, causing it to fall, injuring himself and another child standing near. Notwithstanding the fact that the shutter was on the premises of its owner, and was entirely harmless so long as it was left undisturbed; and notwithstanding the fact that the fall was occasioned by the intervening, unauthorized act of a trespassing child, the other child who was thus injured was allowed to recover damages. In Bridge v. Goodam, 5 C. & P. 190, the defendant left his cart and horse standing unsecured in the street. A person passing by struck the horse, causing it to back the cart against the plaintiff’s window. It was urged in defense to an action for damages that the proximate cause of the injury was not the negligence of defendant, but the wrongful act of the third person who struck the horse; but Lord Tindal held otherwise, and permitted a recovery. In Clarke v. Chambers, 3 Q. B. D. 327, the cases are thoroughly reviewed by Chief Justice Cock-bum, and^ the doctrine of Lynch v. Nurdin expressly approved. The defendant negligently obstructed a carriageway by a bar armed with spikes, and placed across the track. Some third person, having occasion to use the carriageway, removed the bar, and stood it upright in the adjacent footpath. The plaintiff, traveling that way in the dark, came in collision with the obstruction thus created, and was injured. It was held that the act of the third person, though [*496] done without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, was something which might reasonably have been anticipated, and did not affect the defendant’s liability. The theory upon which the action was prosecuted was expressly approved by the court, and is stated in these words: “ As the act of the defendant in placing a dangerous instrument on the road had been the primary cause of the evil, by affording the occasion for its being removed, and thus causing the injury to the plaintiff, he was responsible in the law for its consequences.” If these cases were correctly decided — and we Think they have -the support of the great weight of authority and are sound in principle — and the act of the man who struck the standing horse, or the man who placed the spiked bar in the footpath, was not sufficient to interrupt the causal connection between the primary negligence of the defendant and the injury to the plaintiff, there can be no rule or reason for holding that the very natural act of young and irresponsible children in replacing the panel in the fenqe from which it had fallen will serve to relieve the defendants, as a matter of law, from any liability with which they might otherwise be charged on account of negligence in the original construction of the fence.
For other cases where the intervening act of a child has been held insufficient to prevent recovery, see True v. Woda, 201 Ill. 315 (66 N. E. Rep. 369); Dixon v. Bell, 5 M. & S. 198; Harriman v. R. R., Ohio St. 11 (12 N. E. Rep. 451, 4 Am. St. Rep. 507); Kopplekom v. Pipe Co., (Colo. App.) (64 Pac. Rep. 1047, 54 L. R. A. 284); Lane v. Atlantic Works, 111 Mass. 136.
That the intervening cause which will serve to relieve the original negligence of its actionable quality must be a responsible cause, appears to be well established. Among the numerous authorities upon this point, see, in addition to those already cited: Shearman & Redfield’s Negligence, sections 31, 32, 36, 37; Barrow’s Negligence, page 21; [*497] Wharton’s Negligence, sections 87, 88; 1 Thompson’s Negligence, section 64; Lowery v. R. R., 99 N. Y. 158 (1 N. E. Rep. 608, 52 Am. Rep. 12); Page v. Bucksport, 64 Me. 51 (18 Am. Rep. 239); Lundeen v. Livingston, 17 Mont. 32 (41 Pac. Rep. 995); Gilson v. Canal Co., note 26, 36 Am. St. Rep. 836.
In Birmingham R., L. & P. Co. v. Hinton (Ala.), 37 So. Rep. 635, we have a very late case which is quite parallel in principle with the one at bar. The plaintiff, an infant of tender years, being in a house which was set on fire by the negligence of the defendant, escaped therefrom or was carried outside to a place of safety, from which he returned to the room from which he had been taken, and was severely burned before being finally rescued. He was too young to be charged with contributory negligence. It is there held that the act of the child in returning to the burning building was the “ natural sequence ” of the defendant’s wrong, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover.
Having a material bearing upon the application of the doctrine or rule of proximate cause is the other established proposition that the intervening influence of natural forces in their normal and usual manifestations, though assisting in bringing about the injury, does not interrupt the line of causation. Thus it has been held that a wind, unless it be of an extraordinary character, is not an intervening cause. Ins. Co. v. Tweed, 7 Wall. 52 (19 L. Ed. 65); Poeppers v. R. R., 67 Mo. 715 (29 Am. Rep. 518). So, also, of a rainfall (Johnson v. Friel, 50 N. Y. 679) and the melting of snow (Smethurst v. Church, 148 Mass. 261, 19 N. E. Rep. 387, 2 L. R. A. 695, 12 Am. St. Rep. 550). Akin to the cases here cited are those in which the acts of frightened or unrestrained animals are held not to constitute an intervening cause. McDonald v. Snelling, 14 Allen, 290 (92 Am. Dec. 768); Lowery v. R. R., 99 N. Y. 158 (1 N. E. Rep. 608, 52 Am. Rep. 12); Griggs v. Fleckenstein, 14 Minn. 81 (Gil. 62) (100 Am. Dec. 199); Harris v. Mobbs, L. R. 3 [*498] E. D. 268. Tbe acts of a child not yet arrived at an age' where it is capable of exercising judgment or discretion come well within the philosophy of the rule by which the foregoing cases are controlled.
It is to be conceded that if the act of a child — no matter how young or irresponsible • — • be of itself, and wholly independent of the defendant’s negligence, the cause of the injury complained of, there.can be no recovery of damages. This is but an illustrative application of the general rule that, to charge a person with liability for damages, the negligence alleged must be found to have been the proximate-cause of the injury to the plaintiff. But if negligence has been, shown, the question whether such negligence or the independent act of the child constitutes such proximate cause, or whether the injury resulted from a combination of the defendant’s negligence and the act of the child, is, under ordinary circumstances, a question of fact for the jury, and not of law for the court. Ward v. R. R., 97 Iowa, 52; Brownfield v. R. R., 107 Iowa, 254. The instruction asked by the appellant ignores this principle, and directs the jury, as a matter of law, that if the children had found the panel down, and lifted it back to its position against the fence, before the injury occurred, the plaintiff could not recover. There was therefore no error in refusing the request,. It further appears that the court, in the course of its charge, correctly defined the term “ proximate cause,” and carefully and repeatedly explained to the jury that, to entitle plaintiff to recover, it must first be found not only that the appellants were negligent in building the fence, but that such negligence was the direct and proximate cause of the injury. It should be remembered, however, that “ proximate cause ” does not always means the cause nearest in point of time. It means “ closeness of causal relation, not nearness in time or distance.” R. Co. v. Salmon, 39 N. J. Law, 299 (23 Am. Rep. 214); Dickenson v. Boyle, 17 Pick. 78 (28 Am. Dec. 281); Brown v. R. R., 54 Wis. 343 (11 N. W. 356, 911, 41 [*499] Am. Rep. 41). The primary cause is the proximate cause, though it may act through successive instruments. R. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469 (24 L. Ed. 256). It is not essential, therefore, for a plaintiff to show that an act claimed to have been the proximate cause of an injury was the only cause. It is sufficient if it be shown that the defendant’s act produced or set in motion other agencies, which, in turn, produced or contributed to the final result. 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) page 572; Pollett v. Long, 56 N. Y. 200; Gould v. Schermer, 101 Iowa, 582; Leame v. Bray, 3 East, 595; McDonald v. Snelling, 14 Allen, 292 (92 Am. Dec. 768). Where two causes both of which are in their nature proximate combine to produce an injury, one of which causes being attributable to the negligence of the defendant, and the other not being chargable to the negligence of either party, the plaintiff may recover. Langhammer v. Manchester, 99 Iowa, 295; Manderschid v. Dubuque, 25 Iowa, 109. Or in the language of Mr. Wharton: “We may consider it established that the fact that the plaintiff’s injury is preceded by several independent conditions, each one of which is an essential antecedent of the injury, does not relieve the person by whose negligence one of these antecedents has been produced from liability for such injury.” Wharton’s Negligence, section 85.
We think, therefore, that it was not error to leave the question of proximate cause to the jury, and that the instructions given in respect thereto are correct.
In respect to the other matters argued, we find'no reversible error.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Dissent
(dissenting).— I do not agree in the conclusion reached in the fourth subdivision of the majority opinion. The request for instruction therein set out was bottomed upon the thought that the question arising out of the facts sought to be proven by defendants was one of proximate cause. Fairly stated, the question was this: Was the second fall of the panel, if such there was, proximately caused by the negligence of the defendants, as charged % By [*501] refusing tbe request the court, in effect, repudiated the thought of proximate cause as related to the subject-matter in hand, and not onfy this, but, in the instruction given on its own motion, treated the matter as involving no more than a question of contributory negligence. Given the facts as contended for, and it is my judgment that the situation presented primarily, at least, a question of proximate cause;, and, as such question should have been submitted to the jury., there was error.
I am authorized to say that my view is concurred in by Mr. Justice McOlaiN.