Judges: Young
Filed Date: 6/29/1907
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1. As it is common knowledge that all mechanical devices wear out, it cannot be said as matter of law that a fuse is not more likely to burn out in an old electrical appliance than in a new one. Hence there is no presumption that the defendants were prejudiced by the statement of the plaintiff's counsel, to the effect that they were in fault for using an old car, knowing that its electrical equipment would deteriorate with age. In the absence of evidence that electrical equipment is excepted from the general rule as to the effect of long continued use upon mechanical appliances, the statement of counsel was merely the conclusion fairly inferable from the evidence as to the age of the car.
2. The plaintiff produced no witnesses who had been frightened by the burning out of a fuse prior to the accident; and from that fact the defendants' counsel argued that the testimony that passengers were frequently frightened in that way was false. In other words, the jury were asked to infer, from the plaintiff's failure to adduce such proof, that nobody had ever been frightened in that way before the accident in question, and that the defendants were not chargeable with negligence because they did not anticipate the fright of the plaintiff's intestate.
Since it is common knowledge that a party litigant usually produces all available evidence in support of his contentions, the plaintiff's failure to explain why he did not call some of the persons who, according to his evidence, had been so frightened and could have been summoned to testify, might induce the jury to find that no such persons existed. It was therefore proper for counsel to explain the omission, in so far as he might do so by a reference to the facts in evidence. Hersey v. Hutchins,
The defendants cannot complain because counsel asserted that he would have made an effort to produce available witnesses if he had had sufficient means, instead of requesting the jury to find that fact from the evidence. When in the course of argument counsel has occasion to direct the attention of the jury to an inference which may properly be drawn from the evidence, the conclusion may be positively stated as a matter of fact, or the evidence bearing thereon may be marshalled and the jury be requested to draw the desired inference therefrom. If the former course be pursued, the verdict cannot be set aside on the ground that it was induced by unsworn testimony. Story v. Railroad,
3. The question asked the witness as to the reason why she and another female passenger did not jump from the car was in strict compliance with the rule, and the same is true of the answer so far as it concerned the action of the witness. So far as the answer related to the other passenger, it amounted to no more than a statement that she appeared frightened and about to jump, but was prevented by the conductor. This was merely a description of what the witness saw and heard.
4. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show Mrs. Ouillette's capacity to earn money. One method of proof was to show what work she habitually did. It was therefore competent to show the number and ages of her children, since it appeared that she had cared for them besides doing other work. If the defendants were of opinion that the jury should be instructed as to the bearing of the evidence, they should have requested the court to limit it to the issue of damages. In the absence of such a request, they cannot now be heard to assert that the jury may have made an improper use of the evidence. It is the policy of the law to end litigation. If a party neglects to ask for instructions limiting the application of evidence, he cannot afterward take advantage of the court's failure to give such instructions by an exception to the charge, even if it would have been error to refuse to limit the evidence in response to a request to do so.
5. Evidence as to the customary speed of the defendants' cars at the place of the accident was competent as tending to show the speed of the car upon which the plaintiff's intestate was riding at the time of her injury. If the exception to the evidence was intended to be taken to the answer of the witness, it must be overruled. If the defendants deemed the answer prejudicial in so far *Page 299
as it was inapplicable to any facts in evidence, they should have requested the court to instruct the jury not to consider it. Having omitted to take this step, they cannot now insist that the court's failure to exclude the objectionable matter constitutes reversible error. Meloon v. Read,
6. If the decedent was frightened by the noise and electrical display which accompanied the burning out of the fuse, it cannot be held that her negligence contributed to cause her death if a person of average prudence, frightened as she was, would, or might, have pursued the same course to avoid impending danger. Upon all the evidence, it cannot be said as a matter of law that the electrical display was so slight that a person of average prudence frightened thereby would not have tried to remove himself as far as possible from the fuse-box, and that in such an attempt he might not have been thrown from a car running at a speed of fifteen miles an hour.
The defendants knew the location of the fuse-box. They were, aware that the fuse was designed to burn out whenever the wires were overloaded, that no one could foresee such a happening or predict the violence of the explosion and the extent of the electrical display accompanying it, and that passengers were sometimes so frightened by the noise and flames that those in charge of the, cars had difficulty in averting accidents. It was incumbent upon the defendants to so equip and operate their cars as to render it improbable that passengers who were themselves in the exercise of care would suffer injury; and this obligation was imposed for the benefit of those whom the defendants either knew, or ought to have known, were liable to be injured by a non-performance of the duty. It is clear that it might reasonably be found from the evidence that a man of ordinary prudence, possessed of the defendants' knowledge of the situation and its dangers, would not use for the conveyance of women and children a car with its fuse-box attached to the sill, — in other words, that the defendants negligently failed to provide a safe car. It can also be found that their fault in this respect was the legal cause of the injury for which the plaintiff seeks to recover, if there is evidence tending to prove that they ought reasonably to have anticipated such an accident as the natural and probable result of the continued use of the defective car; and it is obvious that there was such evidence, unless it is to be held as a matter of law that street railway proprietors who equip their cars with an appliance which they know may explode at any moment, producing at the same time a loud detonation and sheets of flame, are not bound to anticipate that a female passenger seated in close proximity to the *Page 300 device may be so startled by such an explosion as to jump from the car because of fright.
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.
Morris v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1931 )
Hussey v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1926 )
Martel v. White Mills ( 1920 )
Maravas v. American Equitable Assurance Corp. ( 1927 )
Sanders v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1914 )
Smith v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1935 )
Chiuchiolo v. New England Wholesale Tailors ( 1930 )
Stocker v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1930 )