162 Mass. 334 | Mass. | 1894
It does not appear in this case that any requests for instructions to the jury were made by either party before the judge’s charge. The bill of exceptions states that “ during the delivery of the charge the plaintiff’s counsel prepared the following requests for rulings, which he believed were proper because of the matter in the charge and the omissions therein, and at the close of the charge requested the court to give them. . . . First, that the notice was sufficient as matter of law. Second, if the superintendent was negligent in any orders he gave in relation to the putting in of the post or the moving of the derrick under the second count, and which negligence caused the accident, the plaintiff is entitled to recover on this part of the case. Third, if the plaiptiff’s deceased exercised the same care that people of ordinary prudence would exercise under the same circumstances, the plaintiff may recover. Fourth, even if the deceased assisted in placing the post, under the direction of Mr. Phillips, and did not understand and appreciate the danger of the risk, the plaintiff is entitled to recover on this branch of the case.” The court declined to give any of them. The exceptions allowed are to “this refusal to rule as requested and the rulings of the court as made,” and to “ the ruling and instruction in regard to the assumption of the risks of the business by the plaintiff’s deceased.” The bill of exceptions contains all of the evidence, and the judge’s charge reported in full. If the exception to “ the rulings of the court as made ” is to be treated as an exception to the charge as a whole, it cannot avail the plaintiff for the correction of specific errors which were not pointed out, unless it appears that there was some substantial error which misled the jury and resulted in a mistrial. Curry v. Porter, 125 Mass. 94. Rock v. Indian Orchard Mills, 142 Mass. 522. But it may be fairly treated as saving to the plaintiff exceptions to those rulings which were at variance with the rulings requested, and to which the attention of the judge was specially directed by the requests.
The judge submitted to the jury the question of the sufficiency of the notice in regard to its statement of the cause of the injury, and in closing this part of the charge used these words: “ If you are satisfied under this evidence, by a fair preponderance, that the defendant was not misled, then the notice is sufficient; if
It is contended that the request came too late, and that the plaintiff cannot now avail herself of it. It is true that, in order to be entitled as a matter of right to have instructions given upon a hypothetical state of facts which may be found from the evidence, a party must seasonably present a request in writing to the judge, and the ordinary rule of practice which has been
The requests in the present case were prepared “ during the delivery of the charge,” apparently somewhat hastily, and they should not be construed too strictly against the plaintiff. The first request to which we have referred is perfect in form, and correct as a proposition of law. The third request, which ends with the words “ the plaintiff may recover,” calls for a definition of “ due care ” as applied to the plaintiff’s conduct, and the quoted words must be interpreted as meaning “ may recover if she proves the negligence alleged against the defendant.” The presiding justice had instructed the jury at considerable length on the subject of the plaintiff’s care, which was an important part of the case, and he used the words “ due care ” many times, but he gave the jury no standard by which to determine what “ due care ” was. The only explanatory phrase was the expression “ proper care,” which occurs once in this part of the charge. We think the plaintiff was entitled to have the jury told, on her request, that “ the same care that people of ordinary prudence would exercise under the same circumstances” was all that was required of the plaintiff’s husband.
Without considering questions raised upon other parts of the charge, we are of the opinion that, for these reasons, the entry must be,
Mxceptions sustained.
The notice, which was dated December 7, 1892, addressed to the defendant, and signed by the plaintiff, was as follows:
“ You are hereby notified that on the eighth day of November, 1892, my husband Jeremiah J. Brick, while in your employ, was instantly killed or died without conscious suffering. The place where my said husband was instantly killed or died without conscious suffering was between Cabot Street and the railroad of the Connecticut River Railroad Company, near the Connecticut River in said Holyoke, and at the place where a new mill was being erected, supposed to belong to the Riverside Paper Company of said Holyoke. The cause of the death of my said husband was the falling of a derrick upon him on account of the same being improperly or insecurely fastened.”