This is an appeal from a verdict on retrial of a personal injury action as directed by opinion of this Court in Beliak v. Plants,
On the first appeal this Court found error in the giving of certain instructions on unavoidable accident. Plaintiff again complains that the trial court’s instruction on unavoidable accident was error. The instruction, however, fully complied with the principles set forth in the opinion on first appeal. Where the evidence oñ a second appeal is substantially the same as that of a preceding appeal, all questions adjudicated therein are the law of the case in all subsequent appeals. Sibley v. Jeffreys,
Appellant argues that in effect there is a change in facts so that the principles *268 . announced in the former decision are not controlling. Sibley v. Jeffreys, supra. Comparison of the facts as shown in the first opinion with the facts stated in the plaintiff’s opening brief herein show only the following difference: the minor plaintiff, who did not testify at the first trial testified at the second. Briefly, his testi'mony was that his playmates had been ' pushing him in a wagon; that they stopped •‘pushing him and he noticed that they were across the street from him; that he was two or three feet from the paved portion «of the road] that he saw the car coming .at a distance of about five feet from him; .and that he turned the wagon over away ■from the car. This evidence is claimed to .Ibe in substantial variance from the- testimony of the first trial and the Court there-i fore should re-examine the giving of an instruction on unavoidable accident.
In the previous-opinion the Court , followed.-;‘the rule . announced in Gray v. Woods,
The second question -centers on defendant’s requested instruction #10 as follows:
“I instruct you that no person is an insurer of the safety of others. * * ”
Objection to giving this instruction was made on the ground that the word “insurer” should be defined. However, no specific definition was requested. We believe, con--siilering the instructions as a whole and all the circumstances of the case that the word could not have been understood by the jury as meaning other than that defendant was not absolutely liable because the plaintiff sustained injuries. .. .
The third ground of error assigned is that defendant’s attorney in his closing argument to the jury was guilty of misconduct. No specific comments are pointed to or specifically identified in the assignment of error. It is asserted generally that defendant’s argument, “among other, things, consisted of accusations, wholly unwarranted, by the evidence, that
*269
the plaintiff, his family, his witnesses and his counsel misrepresented evidence and presented false evidence in order to fraudulently deceive the jury.” We think the answer to this assignment lies in the fact that the plaintiff did not make an objection to the argument before the case went to the jury. Misconduct in the closing argument was first raised in the trial court on plaintiff’s motion for new trial. Our announced rule is that unless misconduct is so serious that no admonishment could undo the damage, the failure to make timely objection is a waiver of error. City of Prescott v. Sumid,
The instant case reveals from a reading of the defendant’s argument that defendant’s counsel put his own particular interpretation on the facts and the credibility to be accorded the testimony of certain of the witnesses. The rule is that wide latitude is allowed in the discussion of facts supplied by the evidence and the inferences to be drawn therefrom. Harvey v. Aubrey,
We find nothing in the record of this case upon which to disturb the judgment entered in the court below.
Judgment affirmed.
