Pettithory v. Clarke Courts
Pettithory v. Clarke Courts
Opinion of the Court
In this case E. Pettithory, Jr., sued Clarke & Courts to recover damages for personal injuries received by him while engaged in the operation of a paper-cutting machine, as an employs of defendants. A trial, with the assistance of a jury, résulted in a verdict and judgment for defendants, from which plaintiff appeals by writ of error.
It was alleged in the petition that while appellant was engaged in operating the paper-cutting machine his hand got caught between the top of the frame of the machine and the knife, which was a part of the machine, inflicting upon him severe and permanent injuries. It was charged that the accident was proximately caused by the defective condition of the machine in several particulars, all due to the negligence of the ap-pellees, that appellant had complained to the foreman, or man in charge, and had been afterwards assured that the defect had been remedied, whereupon he continued at work ■with the result stated. The charge in the petition was that the machine was defective in that it was “old, worn, and defective, in its brake, clutch, and set screws, and was entirely unfit for the purposes for which it was being used.” Defendants answered by general denial and specially pleaded contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff and assumed risk. Specifically stating the several grounds of contributory negligence, the answer charges plaintiff: (1) With having failed to attach or hang, upon the lever or handle by which the machine was operated, a leaden weight furnished for that purpose; (2) that he negligently placed his hands upon or over the knife bar of the machine; (3) that he failed to start the machine on its downward course, and to properly lock and secure the knife bar on its downward course before he placed bis hands over or upon the knife bar; (4) that he negligently placed his hands upon the knife bar while he was standing in front of the machine, instead of moving to the left side of the machine and adjusting the knife and screws from the back; (5) that he placed his hand upon the knife bar while it was upon its upward course, which was a more dangerous way and increased the chance of injury to himself. The cause was submitted to the jury in a charge upon all the issues raised by the pleadings and evidence, after which several special charges were given at the request of appel-lees on the issue of contributory negligence, and also charges on the issue of assumed risk.
By the first assignment or error appellant complains of the action of the trial court in giving, at the request of appellees, special charges 2, 3, S, 12, 13, 14, and 16, on the ground that in each of these special charges the jury was instructed on the issue of contributory negligence, and that the giving of all of these charges was reasonably calculated to, and did, give undue prominence to ap-pellees’ theory as to this defense, to his prejudice.
An examination of the record discloses that with the exception of charge No. 3 these special charges were but elaborations, in different phraseology, of the court’s charge on the issue of contributory negligence; charges Nos. 8 and 16 also relating to the defense of assumed risk.
But this special charge, together with the general charge of the court, was, we think, sufficient to give the jury a clear and comprehensive idea of the law as applicable to these issues. The continued reiteration in these special charges of the general statement as to the law of contributory negligence, already sufficiently covered by the general charge of the court, was calculated to, and very probably did, unduly emphasize these issues. The persistent way in which the principles of law as to contributory negligence and assumed risk were thus repeatedly thrust upon the jury in special charges read to them after the court’s general charge, which we assume was done, in accordance with the universal practice, was almost necessarily prejudicial to appellant. There is a clear line of distinction between special charges intended to supplement the charge of the court stating in general terms the principles of law applicable to each issue, by applying such general principles to the particular fact or group of facts relied upon to support the particular cause of action or defense, and a mere restatement in different language of the several propositions of law set out in the general charge. It is to special charges of the former class that the opinion of the court is directed in the Mc-Glamory and Rogers Cases, supra, and that line of decisions. Such charges a party has a right to have given, and it is error to refuse to give them. But a careful examination of the charges complained of in the present case constrains us to conclude that at least some of them do not fall within this class, but rather within the latter class, and were harmful rather than useful. As was *991 said by tbe Supreme Court in Traylor v. Townsend, 61 Tex. 147: “It is undoubtedly improper for a court to place, by frequent repetition, too prominently before tbe jury any principle of law involved in tbe case.”
We do not deem it necessary to pass upon the other assignments. The errors, if any, therein complained of, are not such as are likely to occur upon another trial, as they all relate to the special charges referred to.
For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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