Inglehart v. Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Co.
Inglehart v. Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Co.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The plaintiff and appellee, Susan Inglehart, fell and received a severe injury while alighting from a street car at the intersection of Fortieth and Hamilton streets in the city of Omaha. She brought an action to recover damages for the injury so received, and obtained a judgment against the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Company for $3,000. The negligence charged against the street railway company was the starting of the car while the plaintiff was in the act of alighting. A short review of the evidence may enable us the better to consider the two points which we conceive to be in the case: (1) Whether the testimony tending to establish that the cars stopped on other days before the injury on the curve, or anywhere around the curve, and before the far side was reached, is material touching the alleged negligence of the company. (2) Whether instruction No. 8, given to the jury upon the court’s own motion, was prejudicial to the defendant.
Price Warren, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he saw the accident, and that, when the plaintiff stepped out onto the running-board, the car started and threw her off. Three other witnesses for the plaintiff seem to have seen the accident, but they were unable to testify to more than the fact that they saw the car come to a stop and saw the plaintiff lying on the pavement. Dr. David A. Medders testified that he saw the plaintiff get off the car, and that she did not get off until the car came to a stop, but he did not see her fall.
The defendant company produced .a number of witnesses who testified to facts more or less material. Mrs. Nelson testified: “WTe were going very slow, and she steps
To the testimony of the witnesses concerning the fact that the car frequently stopped on the curve for the purpose of permitting passengers to alight, the defendant objected, on the ground that the testimony was irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent; that said testimony had a tendency to divert the minds of the jury from the real act of negligence, that is, whether the car started while the plaintiff was in the act of alighting from the car. These objections were all overruled.
It is uncontroverted that the car was going when the %ooman got off. If her fall is to be attributed to the fact that the car was going when she got off, then we are brought to consider whether the car had simply kept on going, or whether it had actually stopped and then started again. If it was a custom to. stop at the place where the plaintiff got off, and that fact was proved, it would tend to corroborate the plaintiff’s testimony that the car did stop just before she got off, because it would malte it appear to be probable. If the evidence shows that it sometimes stopped there, or in that immediate vicinity, then, on the doctrine of chances, that would make it seem probable that it may have stopped there this time, and, owing to the uncertainty of the direct testimony, which is in conflict, this is of some slight probative value. If of such value, it was right to admit it. Unless the car stopped, it could not have started again. So it is most material to show that it did stop. If there is a failure to establish the necessary fact that the car stopped, then the plaintiff cannot recover. It is the stopping of the car and its starting up again, if shown, that together put the defendant on trial for negligence. In Norfolk & A. T. Co. v. Rotolo, 195 Fed. 231, it is held that testimony of custom to stop cars and discharge passengers at a particular point is admissible, as it tends to prove that the car did stop at that point. It was therefore not error to permit the introduction of evidence that the car had before been allowred to stop on the curve.
This instruction, in effect, said to the jury: “This evidence is material. You are authorized to treat it as such, and you will say just how- far it shall control your action and what you will do with it.” In Odell v. Story, 81 Neb. 442, the second paragraph in the syllabus reads: “A judgment will be reversed for the reception of improper evidence where it is probable that such improper evidence influenced the verdict of the jury.”
In National Biscuit Co. v. Nolan, 138 Fed. 6, it is said in the body oí the opinion: “Error presumptively works a prejudice to the party against whom it was committed, and this presumption is only overcome when it appears beyond a doubt that the error challenged did not prejudice and could not have prejudiced the complaining party,” Very many authorities are cited in the opinion in support of this proposition. See, also, Garthwaite v. Bank of Tulare, 123 Cal. 132; Inhabitants of Wayland v. Inhabitants of Ware, 109 Mass. 248; Langston v. Southern E. R. Co., 147 Mo. 457; United States v. Honolulu Plantation Co., 122 Fed. 581; Gilmer v. Higley, 110 U. S. 47.
It is said in the brief of counsel for the defendant: “There is affirmative evidence in the case at bar that said testimony was prejudicial, by reason of the fact that the jury accepted the testimony of the plaintiff and one other witness, coupled with this incompetent and irrelevant testimony, as proof that the car started while plaintiff was
When the court overruled the defendant’s- objections and held that the jury might consider the evidence relating to the usual stopping place, and so instructed the jurors, then that evidence was before them, in a way, for all purposes, and especially for the purpose of emphasising that the car stopped before the plaintiff got off, and therefore that it must have started up again. When the jury were told that they might consider the evidence touching the stopping of the car before it reached the far side,if they thought it had a bearing on the case, was that in effect telling them that because they so thought, if they did so think, they might find for the plaintiff? Could the jury fail to interpret it in any other way? Was this not equivalent to telling the jury that the defendant was negligent? And therefore, inferentially, did not the court tell the jury that the defendant was liable for the damage sustained? We think it follows that the court erred in the form and substance of the instruction which it gave to the jury. They were licensed by the instruction to give it such a bearing, and as much of a bearing, as they liked. “But in trials by jury it is the province of the presiding judge to determine all questions on the admissibility of the evidence to the jury, as well as to instruct them in the rules of law, by which it is to be weighed. Whether there be any evidence or not is a question for the judge; whether it is sufficient evidence is a question for the jury.” 1 Greenleaf, Evidence (16th ed.) sec. 81e.
In Nickey v. Zonker, 31 Ind. App. 90, the court said: “The question of whether the evidence is material is for the court, and all the evidence which the court decides is material must be considered by the jury with due regard to the credibility of the witnesses. * * * The question of whether evidence is material is a question of law, the determination of which, in a civil action, is solely with the court.”
In Clark v. McAtee, 227 Mo. 152, 190, an instruction, which read as follows, was declared erroneous: “And if
In Ball v. Skinner, 134 Ia. 298, 310, an instruction was so phrased as to leave it to the jury to decide whether they would attach any weight to certain evidence which the court had ruled to be material and relevant. The court said: “Without taking time to discuss these propositions, we will say that the materiality of the facts is a matter for the court alone, and the jury is bound to assume that any fact or circumstance allowed in evidence by the trial court is material and entitled to consideration.”
In Slappey v. Sumner, 136 Ga. 692, the court referred to certain evidence, and said: “If any admissions have been testified to before you as having been made as to any matters material to the issues in this case, I charge you that admissions should be scanned with care and are to be considered, if at all, by you in determining the truth or falsity of the issue to which such admission may or may not relate.” It was said the use of the words “if at all” might have had a tendency to mislead the jury into the belief that they might have arbitrarily declined to consider the admission, and it would have been better to omit them.
If the testimony was legally competent, yet nevertheless the defendant was prejudiced by instruction No. 8. To hold otherwise would be equivalent to saying that the court might instruct the jury that they might or might not consider competent or relevant testimony, just as they pleased. Of course., the result of such instructions would be to nullify and render useless the ruling of the court that the evidence was competent and relevant, and it would be
While the district court was seemingly desirous of minimising the effect of what it said in the last sentence of instruction No. 8, no one may know the extent to which this sentence influenced the jury. Jurors are often men of character and force in the community, and sometimes they are ready to go a long distance around the judge if they have a little excuse to do so. In this, case the sentence in question gives them the excuse. We do not feel like indulging the presumption that the judgment must be right notwithstanding an erroneous and misleading instruction.
In Borkenstein v. Schrack, 31 Ind. App. 220, it was said in the'body of the opinion “that * * * erroneous instructions are presumed to have had an influence on the jury, until the contrary is shown.”
In Royal Neighbors of America v. Wallace, 66 Neb. 543, the third paragraph in the syllabus reads: “Where, in an action upon a life insurance policy, by the instructions of the court the jury are left at liberty to disregard all representations as immaterial to the risk, it is prejudicial error, requiring the reversal of the case.” The assured in the application had answered the question whether he had ever had hemorrhages by saying “No.” The court in an instruction submitted to the jury whether this representation was “material to the risk.”
The plaintiff and one of her witnesses testified that the car stopped on the curve, and that the plaintiff then undertook to step from the car, which immediately started again and threw her to the ground. Seven witnesses testified for the defendant, that the car did not stop, that it continued to move slowly, and that the plaintiff stepped from the qare while it was moving. Other witnesses .testi
I am of the opinion that the verdict is against the weight of evidence, and, in any event, the trial court abdicated the place given it by our laws and our method of procedure and gave the jury unbridled license.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I cannot give my approval to instruction No. 8, given by the court, and I think the verdict is so contrary to the great weight of the evidence that the case should be submitted to another jury.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant in the district court for Douglas county for damages caused, as she'alleged, by the negligence of the defendant, whereby she was thrown down and injured in attempting to alight from one of defendant’s cars. The plaintiff notified the conductor that she wanted to leave the car at the intersection of Fortieth and Hamilton streets, in the city of Omaha, and she alleged that defendant stopped the car upon the curve at a point where it was customary and usual to stop for the purpose of permitting passengers to alight therefrom, and that while she was in the act of alighting from the car defendant’s servants “suddenly started said car forward, throwing plaintiff to the street.” The defendant denied that the car had come to a stop, and alleged that plaintiff “stepped from the running-board to the street while the said car was rounding the curve at Fortieth and Hamilton streets, * * * and before said car had reached the regular stopping place at the far side •of said intersection.”
The defendant presents two assignments of alleged error in the brief: First. “The court erred in receiving evidence tendered by the plaintiff tending to show that the north-bound cars sometimes stopped while rounding the •curve on Fortieth and Hamilton streets for the purpose .of permitting passengers to alight therefrom.” Second. “It was for the court to decide on the defendant’s objections to the admissibility of said evidence whether the evidence was competent, material or relevant. It was error for the court to rule that the evidence was competent, relevant and material, and afterwards instruct the jury that it might or might not attach any weight to the evidence, or
We think that the evidence complained of was properly received. The principal question was whether the car was stopped upon the curve. The plaintiff contended that she was attempting to leave the car while the car was stopped, and the defendant answered with the contention that the car was not stopped on the curve, and that plaintiff was attempting to alight while the car was in motion. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence upon this disputed point. While evidence that the car frequently stopped at that point for the purpose of allowing passengers to alight would not of itself prove that it did so upon this occasion, still in view of the defendant’s evidence that the car had not yet arrived at its proper stopping place, the evidence complained of had a bearing upon the probability of plaintiff’s evidence that the car had stopped at the point when she attempted to alight. See, Norfolk & A. T. Co. v. Rotolo, 195 Fed. 231, and cases there cited.
The instruction complained of in the second assignment of error was as follows: “Whether or not the customary place of stopping the cars at Fortieth and Hamilton streets was at the entrance of the curve, at some point on the curve, or beyond the curve on Hamilton street, is not material in this case upon the question whether or not defendant was negligent. * * * But the evidence upon the question of the customary stopping place may be considered by you with the other evidence in determining whether or not the car stopped before plaintiff attempted to get off, if in your judgment it has a bearing upon that question.” If we should consider that this instruction submitted to the jury the question of the competency of the evidence, which is by no means clear, still the instruction was without prejudice to the defendant. If the jury rejected the evidence “of the customary stopping place” as having no bearing upon the fact in dispute, this might be prejudicial to plaintiff, but not to defendant. It is suggested that the evidence was not suffi
There are no errors assigned in the brief which require a reversal, and the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Susan Inglehart v. Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Company
- Status
- Published