70 Miss. 14 | Miss. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
The danger of multiplying instructions in the trial of causes finds another illustration in this case.
The plaintiff sued to recover damages for an injury caused, as he contends, by reason of the negligence of the servant of appellant in the management of an engine in the city of Vicksburg, by reason of which there was apparent danger of collision between the engine and a herdic, in which plaintiff was a passenger, to escape which danger he jumped from the herdic, and in so doing received the injury for which he seeks recovery.
The negligence of defendant’s servant was sought to be established (1) by evidence tending to show that the engine was rapidly driven along defendant’s road, where the same was crossed by Cherry street, and that no reasonable look
Many instructions were asked, and among those given for the plaintiff was the following, mai’ked 4 in the record:
“Negligence is a want of ordinary care. What would be negligence in one case might not be in another. The rule is, the greater the risk or danger, the greater must be the care; and in determining whether the defendant company used ordinary care in stopping its engine after it reasonably appeared to the person in charge that the lierdic would not stop before reaching the track, the jury are to look at all the facts disclosed by the evidence — the fact that the collision occurred on one bf the public streets of the city, where plaintiff had a right to be, and where persons and vehicles are constantly passing and repassing; 'the experience or inexperience of the person in charge of the engine; the speed at which it was going; the difficulty, if any, of seeing persons or vehicles approaching the crossing from either direction; the nearness he would have to approach to the crossing before he could see persons or vehicles on the same, and all other facts and circumstances established by the evidence, which would, in the opinion of the jury, shed any light upon the inquiry. And should the jury, after a careful consideration of all such facts and circumstances, be of opinion that the company did not use ordinary care in so stopping its engine, they will find the issue joined for the plaintiff, if they believe from the evidence he was injured thereby, even though the jury believe from the evidence that the injury was not caused by running at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour.”
Appellant objects to this instruction, upon these grounds:
1. Because .it assumes as proved, the fact that at some time before the collision the engineer realized that the herdic would go across the track; that the collision was upon a
2. Because it permitted the jury to find that the engineer was careless in approaching the crossing, though the rate of speed of the engine was less than six miles per hour.
3. Because tha facts to which the attention of the jury was directed were not relevant to the inquiry suggested by the instruction.
Neither of the first two exceptions is well founded. True, the instruction assumed the facts therein recited to be proved, and this would have been erroneous if the facts so assumed had been controverted. But there was no conflict in the evidence touching these facts, or any of them. In fact, they were testified to by the witnesses for both plaintiff' and defendant. While the court may not by an instruction express an opinion upon the weight of evidence, or assume a controverted fact to be proved, it is not erroneous to so instruct upon facts as to which there is no controversy, but which have been proved by both parties, or conceded to be true.
The second objection is untenable, for the reason that it rests upon the hypothesis that a railroad company owes no other duty to those passing along the streets of a city than to run its trains at a less rate of speed than six miles an hour, and to ring the bell or blow the whistle in crossing streets. This is a total misconception of the purpose and effect of the law prohibiting trains from being run within the limits of an incorporated town at a speed exceeding six miles an hour. The statute makes a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour unlawful, but it does not result that a less rate is at all times and places, and under all circumstances, lawful. That is to be determined by the circumstances of each occasion, and if, but for the statute, negligence would be imputed to the company, it is not by the statute absolved therefrom. Running a train within the limits of a town at a speed exceeding
The third exception? is well taken. The instruction is erroneous. By it the jury was instructed that, in determining whether the engineer was guilty of negligence in not stopping his engine after he had discovered the danger of collision, it might, and should, consider certain facts tending to show negligence before he saw the herdic.
If the instruction had been that, if by reason of negligence existing before the engineer discovered the herdic the injury resulted, the company would not be absolved from liability, because, after the engineer saw the impending danger, he did what he could to avoid it, that would have been a correct announcement of the law.. But it is not true that any thing less than negligence‘before seeing the herdic, added to any thing less .that negligence after seeing it; or that negligence before seeing added to less than negligence after seeing the herdic, would warrant the jury in finding the particular negligence pointed out by the instruction, viz., the failure to use ordinary care in stopping its engine after it appeared to the person in charge that the herdic would not stop before reaching the track.
The evidence is conflicting, as well upon the question of a negligent approach to the crossing as upon that of the conduct of the engineer after he had discovered the danger of collision. It is difficult to suggest what the engineer might have done to avoid the collision, after he discovered the danger, other than to stop the engine. Indeed, plaintiff’s instruction assumes that the negligence' was in not sooner stopping it. Now, it is manifest that, in the nature of things, the facts detailed in the instruction could throw no light upon the conduct of the engineer after the danger was seen and appreciated. The fact that the collision was upon a public street, where the plaintiff had a right to be; that persons were passing and repassing; the difficulty of seeing persons approaching the crossing, were all pertinent to the inquiry
We cannot say that the jury was not influenced by this instruction to the injury of the appellant.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.