43 Mo. App. 463 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
Plaintiff brought this action for. alleged personal injuries, claiming that, while driving on the defendant’s track, a cable car collided with his wagon throwing him therefrom and injuring him. The petition was in two counts, the first claiming that the act of defendant was wilful, while the second count was founded upon negligence. All the evidence has not been preserved in full, but the bill of exceptions shows what its tendency was.- The verdict of the jury was silent as to the first count, but found for the plaintiff on the second count and assessed his damages at $1,000. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.
I. The questions presented by the record before us arise out of the action of the trial court in the giving and refusing of instructions. A preliminary matter however has been presented which we will dispose of before proceeding to examine the instructions. ‘
It has been argued by the counsel for the defendant that, when the record of a cause disclosed an erroneous ruling of the trial court that then the presumption arises that such error was prejudicial to the rights of the party against whom committed and that such presumption continues unless the record shows beyond a doubt that it was not prejudiciál; or, to state the contention in a different way, that when the revisory court discovers in the record that an error has been committed that this per se enjoins upon it the duty to reverse the judgment, unless it further appears that such error did not operate prejudicially. The rule, thus stated in defendant’s contention, seems quite reasonable and unless in some way it is affected by the statute we should be inclined to approve it. The statute just referred to, Revised Statutes, section 2303, provides that the appellate courts of this state shall not reverse the judgment of any court unless it shall believe that error was committed by such court against the appellant, or plaintiff in error, materially affecting the results.
•We cannot discover that the statute is repugnant to,, or encroaches on, this rule of presumption ; on the contrary, we are inclined to think that it supplements the rule with a practical definition of what shall constitute prejudicial error. As we understand it, when error intervenes, the prejudice presumed is of the kind mentioned in the statute, that is, it must affect materially the merits. In all the cases cited by the plaintiff, it will be' observed that the judgment was not reversed on account of the error complained of, but because of something contained in the record, by which it was made to appear that the complainant "was not substantially injured or harmed. They decide nothing at variance
The St. Louis Court of Appeals has thrice decided that error is presumed to be prejudicial. To justify an appellate court to affirm a judgment, when error has intervened in the trial, the burden is upon the party claiming the benefit of the judgment to satisfy the appellate court that the error is not prejudicial. Suttie v. Aloe, 39 Mo. App. 38; Clark v. Fairley, 30 Mo. App. 335; Walton v. Railroad, 40 Mo. App. 544. And we can see no valid reason why the rule just stated is not correct, nor why it should not be followed.
II. The defendant assails the judgment on the ground that the court erred in giving the fourth instrhction for the plaintiff, which told the jury, “if the gripman intentionally and carelessly ran the defendant’s car against the plaintiff’s wagon, that this was negligence.”. This instruction, in effect, told the jury that wilfully and intentionally were convertible terms, and that maliciously meant intentionally and wrongfully, etc. The terms “ carelessness” and “negligence,” in the law, are synonyms. Redf. & Shear. Neg., sec. 2. And so, too, are the terms “wilfully” and “intentionally.” 1 Bouvier’s Law Dic.t. 817. The instructions complained of declared that “intention” is a legal ingredient of negligence. In Shearman and Redfield on Negligence [ 4Ed.] section 5, it is said that, “negligence consists in, .first, a legal duty to use due care ; second, a breach of that duty ; and, third, the absence of distinct intention to produce the precise damage, if any, which actually follows.” In the same work, section 7, it is said,
Elliott v. Block, 45 Mo. 371, was an action, in which was mingled in the petition an action for rent and one for injuries to a mill, resulting from wilful negligence. In the opinion the court say that an instruction which directed the jury that, unless they believed that the
Applying these tests to the instruction under consideration, and the conclusion is irresistible that it was improper.
III. But, though the giving of this instruction was error, is it reversible error % Is. the error such as ■ materially affected the merits of the action ? Under the rule referred to in the preceding paragraph of this opinion, the burden of showing that the error is not prejudicial, that is, that it , does not materially affect the merits, rests upon the plaintiff. We have found error which we must presume was prejudicial in the statutory sense, and, unless the plaintiff can show by the record that there is that which overcomes and destroys this presumption, we must reverse the judgment. It is suggested by the plaintiff, that as the verdict was for the defendant, on the first count of the petition, that the defendant was not prejudiced by the instruction. But the answer to this is that, in the first instruction given for plaintiff, the jury were told that “wilfully” and “intentionally” were convertible terms, and that “maliciously” meant intentionally and wrongfully, etc., while in the plaintiff’s second instruction they
Again, the jury were told by the plaintiff’s fifth instruction that, if they believed the injury was “intentional,” then the defense of contributory negligence could not avail defendant. Now the record informs us that there was evidence adduced by the defendant, tending to prove the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which contributed directly to his injury. How can we tell whether or not this instruction did not influence the action of the jury in rejecting this defense of the defendant. In an argument along this line, it was capable of being used greatly to the defendant’s injury. It was well calculated to mislead the jury into disregarding the defense of contributory negligence. By the plaintiff’s fifth instruction the jury were told that, if the injury inflicted was intentional there was no contributory negligence ; and, by his fourth, the jury were further told that, if the act was intentional, it was negligent. This amounted to telling the jury that, if the injury inflicted was negligent, then there could be no contributory negligence. Notwithstanding it is conceded’ there was evidence of contributory negligence,
Nothing in the record has been pointed out to us by the plaintiff, which tends to convince our minds that the giving of this instruction, which is capable of producing such mischievous consequences, was not error materially affecting the merits. We cannot say that this error has not resulted prejudicially to the defendant. The plaintiff does not show that in the record, which repels the presumption of prejudice affecting the merits of the action.
IY. We cannot discover that the plaintiff’s seventh instruction was erroneous. By the ordinances of the city, section 5, chapter 38, revised ordinances of the City of Kansas, all the street railroads shall at all times be entitled to the track ; and the driver of every vehicle upon the track, or by the side thereof, shall turn such vehicle out when any car comes up, so as to leave the track unobstructed for the passage of such street car. The right of the public to the use of that part of any street over which the track of any street railway is laid is subordinate to that of the railway, only to the extent especially provided in said ordinance. Some such ordinance was, no doubt, found necessary to insure the safe, orderly and expeditious movement of cars of
Y. The plaintiff’s eighth instruction in substance told the jury that, even if the plaintiff was negligent in being on defendant’s track, or in not getting off, yet if defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care might have known, the plaintiff’s danger in time to. have averted the collision, and, after such knowledge or opportunity foT such knowledge, negligently failed to use such means as were at his command to avoid the collision, then the plaintiff ’ s negligence did not excuse that of the defendant. The defendant’s eighth instruction was but the converse of the preceding instruction.
The plaintiff’s instruction, numbered 9, which directed the jury as to the form of their verdict if they found for the plaintiff, was unexceptionable in form and substance. It is better practice for the court to give the form of the verdict for each side, but its failure to do so, unless asked, cannot ordinarily be a ground for the reversal of a judgment. It is not to be regarded as being within the prohibition of the rule forbidding a court by its instructions to give undue prominence to any particular fact.
The instructions are so numerous and elaborate that we have not set them forth in extenso. It is sufficient to say that they are vulnerable to verbal criticism in some respects, but beyond the errors which have been noticed, we think they substantially assert correct rules of law applicable to the case.
For the reasons stated the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.