57 W. Va. 300 | W. Va. | 1905
The plaintiff, L. E. Blake, brought his action of trespass on the case in the circuit court of Cabell county against the defendant, .Camden Inter-State Railway Company, to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been sustained by him while attempting to alight from one of the defendant’s street cars, upon which he was a passenger. A verdict for $500.00 was returned in favor of the plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered, and which judgment we are now asked to review.
The plaintiff claims that on the 19th day of May, 1903, he took passage on one of the street cars of the defendant company, running’from Ashland, Kentucky, to Huntington, West Virginia, and when he arrived at Sixth street, in Huntington, that he notified the conductor that he desired the car stopped at Seventh street, so he could get off; and that at Seventh street the conductor did stop the car and that he attempted to alight; and that, while in the act of so
The defendant claims that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to alight from said car; that at the time he made the attempt to alight, the car had not stopped, and did not stop at the Seventh street crossing, but ran beyond that; and at that crossing, and while the car was running from six to eight miles an hour, the plaintiff attempted to alight, and was thrown and injured.
These are the claims of the respective parties. After the evidence had been introduced before the jury, the plaintiff asked the court to give to the jury the following instruction, which the court gave, over the defendant’s objection, and to which the defendant excepted:
“The court instructs the jury that the law in tenderness to human life and limbs holds railroads and street railway companies liable for the slightest negligence and compels them to repel by satisfactory proof every imputation of such negligence, and if the jury believe that the defendant company did not use the greatest care and diligence in transporting the plaintiff to his point of destination, but was negligent in the management of its car upon which the plaintiff was riding as a passenger, and that by reason of such negligence, he was injured as alleged in his declaration, then the jury shall find for the plaintiff and assess his damages at such sum as the evidence may show that he has actually sustained.”
It is presented by the defendant that this is a binding instruction, and that, under the rule laid down in the case of McCreery v. Railroad Co., 43 W. Va. 110, it was error to give it. If this is what is termed a binding instruction, then it was error to give it. “Now, the law is well settled that instructions -which tell the jury that if they believe a certain supposed and enumerated state of facts, then the defendant is liable, and they must find for the plaintiff, are fatally defective if there is wholly omitted from such enumeration a fact the evidence tends to prove, which, if true, would require a different verdict.” Woodell v. Improvement Co., 38 W. Va. 23. While it is true this present instruction does not, in terms, refer to the question of contributory negli
This instruction tells the jury that the defendant is “liable for the slightest negligence and compels them to repel by satisfactory proof every imputation of such negligence. ” What is meant by “imputation of such negligence?” The declaration charges that the defendant was negligent; “imputation” means a charge of negligence. If it can be said that a .jury should find that the defendant is guilty of negligence because negligence is imputed to it, then .the consequential result of that would be that the burden would be shifted upon the defendant to show that it was not guilty of negligence. That is plainly the effect of this instruction. By saying that the defendant must repel, by satisfactory proof, every imputation of negligence, could mean nothing else than to tell the jury that the burden is upon the defendant to prove that the injury was not the result of its negligent act. Counsel for the plaintiff cites the case of Searrles v. Railway Co., 32 W. Va. 370, in which an instruction, embodying this language, was held good. We find no fault with this instruction in that case, but it must be borne in mind that the Sewrles Gase is very different from the case we have in hand. There an action was brought to recover for an injury sustained by a passenger by reason of the overturning of one of the cars of
A street railway company, with respect to its passengers, is charged with the highest degree of care to avoid their injury, and to safely carry them to their destination; and many authorities hold, and it is the true doctrine, that an accident being proved in an action brought bjr a passenger against a carrier for injuries sustained by the passenger, the burden is thrown upon the defendant to show that it exercised the high
Therefore, an instruction which contains such language as would lead the jury to believe that the facts proved raised a presumption of negligence against the defendant, is not applicable to this case, and should not have been given, and it was error for the court to give it; and, inasmuch as the case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial, it is not proper to comment upon the testimony.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and a new trial awarded to the defendant.
JSeversed.