Judges: Montgomery
Filed Date: 2/5/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The defendant's train of cars having become detached, was moving along with an interval of from fifty to one hundred yards. The plaintiff's intestate and two others were walking on the track, and their attention being attracted by the noise of the train in their rear, they stepped off the track in good time. They had not observed that the train had become detached, and instantly, upon the front section having passed, they jumped back upon the track and continued their walk. The other two, discovering the rear section coming from behind them, got out of danger, but the intestate, remaining on the track, was run over and killed. He could have seen the rear section if he had looked. The defendant had proper appliances to stop the train, and the train was properly equipped and manned. There was evidence going to show that the intestate was under the influence of liquor at the time he was killed. The following issues were submitted to the jury:
1. "Was the intestate killed by the negligence of the defendant, as alleged in the complaint?
2. "Was the intestate guilty of contributory negligence?
3. "What damage, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover?"
The plaintiff insisted that another issue should have been submitted, viz.: "Notwithstanding the contributory negligence of plaintiff's intestate, could the defendant have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence?" This was declined, but his Honor remarked that if the evidence, after it was all in, justified, he would submit it to the jury. After the evidence was concluded, the court, being of opinion that the issue was not warranted, refused to submit it, and the plaintiff excepted. There was no error in this ruling of his Honor, for, as he said, there was no evidence tending to prove that the defendant could have averted the plaintiff's (1026) injury. The engineer had passed him, standing off the track, and there was no evidence that he could have given him warning of the separation in the time between his stepping back on the *Page 645
track and his injury. We do not mean to say that his Honor should have submitted the issue tendered by the plaintiff, even if there had been testimony going to show that the defendant could have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence after the intestate stepped back on the track. The issues which had been submitted were sufficient, under any phase that the testimony might present, under proper instructions from the court. Denmark v. R. R.,
The first issue, under instructions from his Honor, was found against the defendant, and there was no appeal; and, as we have said, there was no evidence that defendant had the last clear chance to avoid doing the injury, the case resolves itself into a very narrow compass. Was the plaintiff's intestate ordinarily careful under the circumstances? Did he act, under all the circumstances, as a prudent man similarly situated would have done? If so, he was entitled to recover; if not, he would not be. It is the province of the court, where the facts are undisputed or where but a single inference can be drawn from the testimony, to instruct the jury whether either of the parties has been negligent and what culpable act must be deemed the proximate cause of an injury. Where the facts are in dispute, or more than one inference might be drawn from the testimony by fair-minded men, it is the duty of the court to instruct the (1027) jury, when requested to do so, whether in any aspect of the case, arising out of the testimony, the acts of either party would constitute culpable carelessness; but in such cases it is always the province of the court to tell the jury that they are to determine whether, under all the circumstances, the party charged with culpability acted as would the ideal prudent man, and to make their verdict depend upon their decision of that question. Tillett v. R. R., post, 1031; R. R. v. Crawford,
"The law requires of persons who enter on a railroad track to exercise the ordinary care of a prudent person in like circumstances, and they are required to look and listen and take notice of danger which they could so discover, and they are accordingly required (1028) to look both ways; but in a case like this the matter is left to the jury to say, on the whole evidence and under all the circumstances, whether the intestate was in the exercise of the ordinary care of a prudent person in failing to observe and take note of his danger, with this special direction, which the evidence makes pertinent, that if the failure to observe or note the danger was caused by his being drunk or under the influence of liquor the plaintiff cannot recover, and in such case the jury should answer the second issue ``Yes.' With this special direction the matter is submitted to the jury to say, on the whole evidence, whether the deceased was in the exercise of the ordinary care of a prudent person in going upon the track, just after the front section of the train had passed, and failing to observe and note the danger from rear cars, the plaintiff contending that his intestate had a right to suppose that all the train had passed and that no cars were so near behind the others and that there was no danger in that direction; and defendant contending that the deceased was negligent in any event for going on the track without looking both ways, and he should have known that all of the train had not passed, because the caboose is always of a different color, and this was behind the rear cars."
The exceptions to the charge, though varied in form, are all directed to this portion, or other parts embracing the same proposition and statements.
We see no error in the charge. There was no exception to the admissibility of the evidence going to show that the deceased was under the influence of liquor. The exception to the charge bearing on this point of evidence was that his Honor stated, as if the fact were found or admitted, that the deceased was under the influence of liquor. The language used by the court was: "If the failure (of defendant) (1029) to observe or note the danger was caused by his being drunk or under the influence of liquor, he cannot recover." It would have been better if the court had told the jury that if they *Page 647 found from the testimony that deceased was under the influence of liquor, and that was the cause of his failure to get off the track, and that he thereby contributed to his own hurt, he could not recover. We cannot believe, however, that the jury understood his Honor to mean for them to take as a matter certain, at his hand, that the defendant was under the influence of liquor, regardless of the testimony. The testimony was conflicting, and some of it went so far as to state that the defendant was not drinking at all.
We think it unreasonable that the jury should have been misled by the charge of the judge or should have understood him to mean to declare as a fact found by himself that the deceased was drunk or under the influence of liquor. With the exception that the plaintiff's intestate was entirely sober, and that there were fewer elements of contributory negligence on his part, the case of Breckinfelder v. R. R.,
The exceptions to the charge of the court were numerous, but, as we have said, they are all directed to the parts which we have discussed, and we are of opinion that there is no error and the exceptions not well taken.
No Error.
Cited: Sheldon v. Asheville,
(1031)