v.
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Company
Defendant maintains a switchyard in the city of Dubuque, upon which there are three tracks running lengthwise thereof. These tracks run in an easterly direction, branching off from defendant’s main line, which runs substantially north and south. The northerly switch track is called the house track, and just north of this track [*433] was the defendant’s freight depot. Cars were set in upon the house track to be loaded and unloaded into and from the freighthouse. South of the south switch track is what is known as the Dubuque 33oat Works. In order that travelers might reach these works and other industries south of the yards defendant had constructed a plank crossing across the three switch tracks, which crossing was from fifteen to twenty-five feet west of the west end of the freighthouse. This crossing was made of planks three inches or more in thickness and sixteen feet long, laid lengthwise and parallel with the rails of the tracks. The planks were laid upon the railway ties, and the west ends thereof were sawed square across, so that when put in place the tops were about three and one-half inches above the surface of the ties. The ends were not beveled off, and at some places they were warped so that they were more than four inches above the surface of the ground. There was no filling of dirt, cinders, or other material at the west end of the planks. The crossing had been in this condition for a considerable length of time.
On November 26, 1906, plaintiff was employed by defendant as a night switchman to work in its Dubuque yards. His hours were from six-thirty or seven p. m. until five or six a. m. II|s duties were to couple and uncouple cars, and to see that they were transferred and distributed to the proper tracks. In the performance of his duties he was compelled to get on and off moving engines. The engine with which he generally worked was equipped as a switch engine, with a headlight and a foot or running board at either end. Prior to December 10, 1906, plaintiff says that he had no knowledge of the construction of the crossing at the place in question, and did not know that the boards were unbeveled, or that they stuck up, as heretofore indicated. The night of December 10th was dark, and on that night he was ordered to go down on the house track with the switch engine and get a car which was to [*434] be taken out and sent to East Dubuque in Illinois. This car was a little east of the crossing in question. Pursuant to orders, the switch engine backed out to the house track, and plaintiff got upon the rear footboard. "When, he reached what he thought was a proper place, plaintiff gave the engineer a slow signal. The engineer responded, and slowed the engine down until it was running at the speed of about one and one-half or two miles per hour. "When at a point perhaps one and one-half or two feet from the west end of the planks making the crossing, plaintiff attempted to get off the' footboard of the engine to go ahead to see if the couplers were properly arranged on both the engine and the car just ahead, so that a coupling would be effected, and as he stepped off his toe struck and caught against the west end of one of the crossing planks, and before he could extricate himself, one foot was caught by the footboard of the engine, throwing him violently forward. He then hallooed to the engineer to stop, but before he did so plaintiff’s other foot was caught, and he received the injuries of which he complains. After plaintiff hallooed the engine ran about two feet. Plaintiff stepped off the footboard directly in front of the moving engine, and he claims that this was the usual, common, and customary method of doing the work, both in the defendant’s yards and in the yards of other railway companies. The testimony also shows that the customary method of putting in crossings such as the one complained of is to bevel off and taper the ends of the planks. There was testimony tending to show that the headlight on the switch engine did not throw any light on the track within a distance of from forty to fifty feet from the engine. This is a statement of the case largely from plaintiff’s standpoint, and the negligence charged is the faulty construction of the crossing and the fact that the ends of the planks were not beveled or tapered off, and that there was no filling in at the ends of the plank. Defendant denies any negligence on its part, [*435] pleaded contributory negligence, and assumption of the risk by plaintiff, and also pleaded that he was a member of defendant’s relief department, and, after receiving his injuries, claimed and accepted the benefits promised him, thus relieving defendant from further responsibility. Stated in another form, this last plea is what defendant calls an accord and satisfaction. The trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. Many points are relied upon for a reversal of the judgment, to the more important of which we shall direct our attention.
In the latter case it is said: “The plaintiff introduced a witness who testified that it was usual and customary for brakemen, in going over the tendel’, to step on the lid of the manhole. We do not understand counsel to object to this line of evidence; It was surely proper for the plaintiff to show that he was in the line, of his duty -when he received the injury, and that he pursued the course usually adopted by men in that employment under similar circumstances. Jeffrey v. K. & D. M. Railway Co., 56 Iowa, 546; Whitsett v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Railway Co., 67 Iowa, 150.” See, also, Jochem v. Robinson, 72 Wis. 199; Waters v. Moss, 12 Cal. 535 (73 Am. Dec. 561) ; Houston R. R. v. Cowser, 57 Tex. 293; Nelson v. So. Pac. Co., 18 Utah, 244 (55 Pac. 364); Maynard v. Bruck, 100 Mass. 40; Koltsi v. Railroad, 32 Minn. 133 (19 N. W. 655) ; Cass v. R. R. Co., 14 Allen (Mass.) 448; Fuller v. Railroad, 21 Conn. 557; Keating v. Railroad, 49 N. Y. 673, affirming 3 Lans. 469; Railroad Co. v. Carpenter, 56 Fed. 451 (5 C. C. A. 551) ; Prosser v. Railroad, 17 Mont. 372 (43 Pac. 81, 30 L. R. A. 814).
[*438] We have then to determine judicially whether or not plaintiff’s act in stepping off in front of the moving engine and between the rails was negligence per se. If it was, then testimony as to custom should not have been received, and there should have been a directed verdict for defendant. Whether or not one is guilty of such negligence as defeats his recovery is ordinarily a question of fact for a jury, depending 'upon the facts and circumstances of each particular case. In some cases it has been held negligence as a matter of law for one to step in front of- a moving car or engine. See Ferguson v. Railroad, 100 Iowa, 733; Cowles v. Railroad, 102 Iowa, 507. In the latter case plaintiff knew of the exact defect, and voluntarily exposed himself to the danger. In the former plaintiff’s duty did not call for his presence on the forward footboard, and he voluntarily chose a dangerous course, where a perfectly safe one ivas at hand. Here it was the duty of plaintiff to go between the rails at some time while the engine was in motion to see that the couplers were properly arranged. The engine was moving about half as fast as a man would ordinarily walk. It was close upon the car to which’it was to be coupled; and, if the place had been safe, plaintiff would undoubtedly have reached the car and performed his duties without harm. While the case is a very close one upon this proposition, it is one where reasonable minds might honestly differ, and in such cases the question is for a jury under proper instructions. The case in this respect is much like Kroener v. Railroad, 88 Iowa, 16. She, also, Whitsett v. Railroad, supra. From this conclusion it follows that the testimony was properly received, and that the court did not err in submitting the matter to the jury. It should be said in this connection that defendant had no rules forbidding employees from getting off moving engines between the rails. Moreover, the crossing planks extended for the full width of the foot-board outside the rails, and the injury was quite as likely [*439] to happen had plaintiff stepped from the footboard outside the rails. Tibbitts v. R. R. Co., supra, lends support to our conclusion on this branch of the case. See, also, De Cair v. Railroad, 133 Mich. 578 (95 N. W. 726) ; Sankey v. Railroad, 118 Iowa, 39; Gillespie v. Railroad, supra; Chittick v. Railroad, 88 Minn. 11 (92 N. W. 462).
Moreover, the general rule is that contracts, although legal where made, will not be enforced in a sister state if contrary to public policy or against positive statutory enactment. Davis v. Bronson, 6 Iowa, 410; Reynolds v. Nichols, 12 Iowa, 398; Boyce v. Wabash Co., 63 Iowa, 70; Wind v. Iler, 93 Iowa, 316; Miller Co. v. Stevens, 102 Iowa, 60.
In the Reynolds case, supra, it was said by Wright, J.: “So the rule is declared as general that all contracts or agreements, which have for their object anything which is repugnant to the general policy of the common law, or contrary to the provisions of any statute, are void and not to be enforced.” Judge Stockton, in the Davis case, supra, said: “The - contract must not be opposed to the policy and institutions of the state where it is sought to be enforced. In all such cases the contracts will be held utterly void, whatever may be their validity in the country where they are made, as being inconsistent with the duties, the policy, or the institutions of the state where they are sought to be enforced.” So that whether the action be treated as a tort or an attempt to enforce a contract, valid where made, but opposed to the policy of the state as declared by its legislative body, the rule must be the same, and the defenses relied upon must be disregarded.
[*441] We are asked finally to overrule the McGuire ease because the statute here considered is unconstitutional and void. This we are not prepared to do. That case is now pending in the Supreme Court of the' United States, and until it has spoken and declared the statute unconstitutional, we are content to follow our former holding.
Some other matters are discussed by counsel, but-they have been disposed of in what has already been said, or are' regarded as unimportant, and are not, for that reason considered.
We have gone over the record with care, and find no prejudicial error. The judgment must therefore be, and it is, affirmed.