Extensive evidence was given during the trial of the acts, doings, and character, as established among railroad men, of Brown, with a view of furnishing ground upon which the jury might find that Brown was incompetent as an employé, and that his incompetency was known to the defendant, and that it was, therefore, negligent in keeping him in its employ. During this trial considerable evidence was given from the minutes of the trial of the Park Case,
At the close of the body of the charge the court was asked to charge “that the evidence of the names that Brown was known or called by, and the reputation it is testified he had, neither of them are to be considered by the jury as proving that previous to the accident in question he had been guilty of any negligence whatever in the discharge of his duties.” In response thereto the court said: “I charge that. Those things are offered upon the question of notice. They are received upon the question of notice, as I stated in my charge.” Thereupon the court was asked “to charge the further fact that the jury must find Brown to have been guilty of specific negligence in the discharge of his duty as flagman or brakeman before the night in question, to charge the defendant with negligence.” Thereupon the court replied: “Of course, if they rely upon specific acts at all, they must be acts prior to this accident.” Some further colloquy occurred between the counsel and the court, and the court observed: “As a general proposition, I suppose if you can prove that a man was a lunatic or idiot, that would be competent upon the fact whether he was a competent or proper employé, although he had not worked for a railroad, and had not been guilty actually of specific acts of incompetency.” The court charged affirmatively that the jury “in determining whether it was negligent on the part of the company to keep him are confined to those things alone, but they may consider, in addition to any acts of negligence he has been guilty of, any other evidence in the case bearing upon his mental condition or his competency.” As soon as that language fell from the court, the counsel for the defendant said, “So far as that is concerned, I except.” We think the reception of the evidence to which we have referred, in view of the manner in which it was dealt with by the learned trial judge, and the exceptions which we have stated in respect to the receiving of the evidence and the charge in respect thereto, to which exceptions were taken, present error. The jury was not left uninfluenced by the evidence of nicknames and appellations which had been applied to Brown. The reception of the evidence was, therefore, prejudicial error. Marrinan v. Railroad Co. (Sup.)
Judginent and order reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event. All concur.
