Saar v. Chicago, Burlington & Kansas City Railway Co.
Saar v. Chicago, Burlington & Kansas City Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
To entitle plaintiff to recover, it was necessary under the issues for him to show that the gate
The record of the court’s ruling on the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and render judgment for defendant, shows that the action of the court sustaining the motion was based on the answer to the interrogatory last above referred to. We think this ruling was erroneous. It was not necessary for the jury to determine specifically how the gate became open, the material question being whether it was open on account of defective construction. Suppose the fastening of the gate to have been totally insufficient, so that by any one of a variety of causes, none of them due to the intervention of human agency, the gate might have been open; it would not do to say that the jury must specifically find through which one of these causes and in what particular manner it had become open at the time plaintiff’s cow passed through. The answer to the interrogatory, therefore, was not such as to be necessarily inconsistent with a general verdict for plaintiff.
It is argued for the appellee that the general verdict might have been set aside because inconsistent with other of the special findings, and others are referred to in the motion; but the court based its ruling specifically on the one above quoted, and, furthermore, the others which are specified in the motion are not such as would sustain a judgment for defendant, notwithstanding the general verdict. It is not necessary to set out the other findings, as they are not relied on for appellee in argument.
The judgment is therefore reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Saar, Jr. v. The Chicago, Burlington & Kansas City Railway Company
- Status
- Published