167 P. 841 | Mont. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
The two portions of the city of Missoula which lie on either side of the Hellgate River are connected by a bridge 1,023.6 feet long. The width of the bridge is divided into a main roadway 28.9 feet wide and two footways — one on each side of the roadway — and the footways are separated from the roadway by railings. Along the center of the roadway is the street-car track of the Missoula Street Railway Company, and the clearance for vehicles on each side of the track, when a ear is passing, is 10.6 feet. The bridge is not level, but ascends on a one per cent grade from the south end for a distance of about 174 feet, whence it descends to the north end. Its highest point is about 1.74 feet higher than the south end, and 9.28 feet higher than the north end. On the 21st day of February, 1914, the plaintiff with four companions was riding in a buggy pulled by a gentle, well-broken horse, crossing the bridge from south to north; the driver, as was proper, kept to the roadway on the east side of the railway track, so that street-cars occupying the track would pass to her left. The surface of the bridge was uneven, due to ice, slush and swollen blocks. “At the time,” so the complaint alleges, “the buggy in which plaintiff was rid
I. It is said that certain instructions which incorporated the doctrine of the last clear chance injected a principle of law foreign to the issues and prejudicial to the defendant. The instructions thus assailed are numbered P. 1, P. 5, P. 7 and P. 8; and if they announce and authorize the jury to apply the doctrine of the last clear chance, they are error, for that doctrine was not in the ease. To make that doctrine applicable
But none of the instructions referred to announce, or attempt to announce, the doctrine of the last clear chance; they announce, or attempt to announce, the law of primary negligence, the defendant’s duty of ordinary care as applicable to
Instruction P. 1 sets forth the events claimed by the plaintiff as constituting her obvious peril — the basis of her assertion that the defendant’s motorman was negligent — and tells the jury that if they find these to be facts, their verdict should be for the plaintiff. The objection to the instruction is “that, while.
P. 5 states an abstract proposition of law, in effect this: That if the motorman, acting as an ordinarily prudent person, would have believed the plaintiff in peril and that he could not pass the buggy with reasonable safety to its occupants, then in passing he did not act with the proper degree of care. The objection to the instruction that “it does not conform either to the allegations of the complaint or the proof ordered with regard to the peril,” is manifestly inapt.
P. 7 told the jury that if, as the car approached, the horse
P. 8 is to the effect that if, under the conditions stated, the motorman should have slowed down or stopped his car, it is immaterial as á matter of law whether the injury occurred as the front of the car reached the buggy, or as the rear end passed the horse. The objection “that it covers a state of facts not charged as negligence in the complaint; and, second, because the instruction is not in conformity with the theory of the remaining instructions offered by the plaintiff, nor in conformity with the theory of the last clear chance relied upon in the complaint,” is, we must confess, not very plain to us. So far as we understand it, we say the complaint does not proceed upon the theory of the last clear chance; but does, as noted above, present as a fact that the plaintiff was imperiled by reason of the horse becoming restive and unmanageable through fear of the car, noisily approaching from behind.
Much valuable argument is addressed to the proposition that these instructions are wrong in principle — plain misdirections as to the law; but however this may be, it should be clear that they are not open to the objections urged against them and do not inject into the case any principle of law foreign to the issues.
II. The next contention is that the following instruction (P. 18) was incorrect and prejudicial: “You are instructed that
III. Error is assigned upon the refusal of defendant’s offered Instructions D. 2, D. 5 and D. 9. All that is valuable in these instructions was actually given the jury in the charge. D. 5 contains matter which is gratuitous and irrelevant; while
IY. It is finally insisted that the evidence preponderates
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.