Boyd v. City of Ames
Boyd v. City of Ames
Opinion of the Court
While walking along one of the streets in the ■defendant city, plaintiff fell and received the injuries of which he ■complains. He charges that his fall was due to the defective and unsafe condition of the sidewalk over which he was passing, and that .he was at the time exercising due care. 'The principal complaint made by plaintiff is that the court erred in denying his motion for a new trial. He insists that the verdict is contrary to the evidence and the instructions, and that the court erred in denying him the right to amend .his pleadings, and in the giving of one of its instructions. The rule with reference to interfering with verdicts, especially where the court .has seen and heard all the witnesses and denied a motion for a new ■trial, is so well understood by the profession that it need not be repeated here. It is enough to say that, while there may not have been a direct conflict in the evidence on every material point, yet there was a square conflict regarding the condition of the w'alk, and on the proposition of defendant’s knowledge of that condition. The •circumstances shown in evidence, regarding the manner in which
The part of the instruction complained of reads as follows: “Or-if you do not find that plaintiff was thrown and injured as claimed by him, or if you believe he was thrown and injured, but do not find that, he was free from negligence on his part contributing to said injury then he cannot recover in this action.” Abstractly considered, this instruction is clearly correct. But it is said there was no evidence-on which to base it. If the case was a proper one for the jury, it is manifest that the instruction quoted was necessary to a full statement of the case. The real point is that the. verdict is contrary to the evidence. That complaint has already been answered, and we need only-say w e discover no error. — Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John H. Boyd v. City of Ames
- Status
- Published