DocketNumber: No. 612.
Judges: Gaines
Filed Date: 12/20/1897
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This suit was brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover damages for personal injuries. The conclusions of fact found by the Court of Civil Appeals indicate in a general way the issues made upon the trial, and are as follows: "On March 18, 1896, the appellee was a section hand in the employment of the appellant. He was under the directions of William Newman, as a vice-principal. He was engaged with three others, William Newman, the foreman, J.K. Dean, and Henry Bachman, the last two his fellow servants, in unloading some switch points from one of appellant's cars. These switch points were heavy, and the strength of four men was required to lift them. The appellee and William Newman were at one end of the switch points, and Dean and Bachman *Page 349 at the other. Newman ordered the appellee to seize and help him lift the end of the fourth and last switch point, indicating to the plaintiff and inducing him to believe that he would be assisted by the foreman in lifting it. Newman, however, negligently failed to render the assistance, and the entire weight of the switch point was thus cast upon the appellee, from which, as a proximate result of the negligence of Newman, he sustained injury consisting in inguinal hernia. For this injury he recovered in this suit a verdict and judgment in the sum of $1200, not complained of as excessive."
During the progress of the trial, the plaintiff, being upon the stand as a witness in his own behalf, was asked to state whether or not be was a married man. The defendant by counsel objected to the question, and his objection was overruled, whereupon the witness answered, that he had a wife. The witness also was permitted to answer over the objection of the defendant, that his wife had no means of support except her own labor. The ruling of the court in admitting this testimony was assigned as error in the Court of Civil Appeals and is also assigned in this court. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the admission of the evidence was error, but concluded that the error was harmless. We concur in their ruling, that so much of the testimony as merely showed that he had a wife was not injurious to the defendant, from the fact that the wife was a witness in the case, and the jury must therefore have known that the plaintiff had a wife. But we cannot agree that the mere fact that the plaintiff was a laboring man and was earning at the time of the accident but a dollar per day, showed that he had no other resources. In the case of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company against Lyde (.
It is also complained, that the court in its charge erred in defining negligence. The definition in question is as follows: "Negligence is the omission to do something which a reasonable man guided by those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing something which a reasonable and prudent man would not do." The conduct of a man of ordinary prudence under all the circumstances of the case, is the standard by which the law tests the question of ordinary negligence. "A reasonably prudent man" may mean the same as "an ordinarily prudent man." But a different signification may be attached to the words "a reasonable man." A man may possess ordinary reasoning powers, and yet he may have less caution than a man of ordinary prudence. The definition is not accurate and we incline to think it erroneous.
Again, it seems to us that the charge of the court upon the measure of damages may be subject to the criticism made upon it in the plaintiff in error's assignment. To charge, that in assessing the damages they should consider the plaintiff's "personal injury," his "pain and suffering" in consequence of his injuries and "the permanent injury sustained by him," is we think calculated to confuse the jury and to induce them to give damages twice for the same loss.
We think the other assignments of error on part of the plaintiff in error were correctly disposed of in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals.
Since the case is to be reversed, it is proper to pass upon a cross-assignment of error made in the court of Civil Appeals by the appellee — the defendant in error in this court. He complains that the court erred in giving the following charge at the request of the defendant: "If you find from the evidence that it was part of the duty of the plaintiff and his colaborers to unload switch points, and the number of men to handle the same and the danger incident to handling same was a matter open and patent to the common observation, and the plaintiff could have known these facts by the use of ordinary care, and no act of negligence on the part of defendant's foreman, Wm. Newman, contributed to said injury, he assumed the risk incident to his employment and cannot recover; and if you so find you will find for defendant." The ground of complaint is, that the instruction is a practical repetition of one paragraph in the main charge. This may not occur upon another trial and is hardly a matter which requires consideration at our hands at this stage of the proceedings. However, in view of another trial we *Page 351
deem it proper to say, that both the charges in question embody a proposition in law which is not correct. We understand the law to be that when the servant enters the employment of the master, he has the right to rely upon the assumption that the machinery, tools and appliances with which he is called upon to work are reasonably safe and that the business is conducted in a reasonably safe manner. He is not required to use ordinary care to see whether this has been done or not. He does not assume the risks arising from the failure of the master to do his duty, unless he knows of the failure and the attendant risks or in the ordinary discharge of his own duty must necessarily have acquired the knowledge. Bonnet v. Railway Company,
For the error of the trial court in admitting testimony that the wife had no resources except the labor of her husband, the plaintiff, the judgment of that court and that of the Court of Civil Appeals are reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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