133 Ind. 443 | Ind. | 1892
The undisputed facts are that the appellee was the owner of a building in the town of Farmersburg, the lower part of which was occupied by him as a storeroom and warehouse, and the upper part was leased by him to a lodge of Odd Fellows.' A walk ran along the side of the building, and this was usually ti-aversed by the members of the- lodge in going to, and departing from, lodge meetings. The stairway leading up to the lodge-room was reached by ascending a platform raised several inches above the walk. A barrel was rolled upon the walk, near the platform, and in coming out of the lodge-room the appellant struck his foot against the barrel and was thrown down. The evidence tends to prove that the barrel was placed on the walk by an agent of the appellee, in the discharge of the general duties of his employment, on the afternoon of April 20,1889, and was loft there during the night. There is evidence tending to prove that the barrel projected a considerable distance over the walk, although, as to the distance of the barrel from the wall, there is some conflict in the testimony of the witnesses. There is, also, evidence tending to prove that the night was dark.
"Where an oivner leases property to a tenant, and licenses the tenant, or those having rights under the tenant, to use a way of ingress and egress to the demised premises, he has no right, by obstructing the way, to make its use dangerous to the tenant or those having rights under him. A landlord who leases premises so far invites its use by all persons whose known relations to the tenant are such as entitle them to enter and depart from the demised premises as to impose upon him the duty of refraining from any negligent act that makes the use of the premises unsafe. The members of the lodge were, therefore, not intruders, but were upon the premises, while going to and from the lodge meeting, by the implied invitation of the appellee; and, if he made the way of entering and leaving the lodge-room unsafe by a negligent or wrongful act, he
Whether a party is guilty of negligence is, ordinarily, a question in which the elements of law and fact are blended. Rogers v. Leyden, 127 Ind. 50, and cases cited.
The law comes from the court in the form of instructions, in most cases, and the questions of fact are determined by the jury from the evidence. In this instance a material and controlling question of fact, which it was the duty of the jury to decide, was whether the distance between the barrel and the wall of the appellee’s building was such as to permit the safe use of the walk by one exercising ordinary care. This is as favorable a view of the question for the appellant as can be taken, for, if we should apply the rule which controls in cases where public sidewalks are obstructed by a wrong-doer, we should be compelled to hold that the appellee was guilty of negligence in placing the barrel upon any part of the walk, for the authorities lay down the rule that one who obstructs any part of a public sidewalk is guilty of an actionable wrong. City of
But it is unnecessary to decide whether the rule with reference to public sidewalks applies to this case or not, inasmuch as it is entirely safe to affirm that, if the appellee did, by his negligent act, make a part of the walk unsafe, he is guilty of culpable negligence, unless there was an unobstructed part safe for passage. In other words, if the obstruction placed upon the walk so far encroached upon it as to make its use by the members of the lodge dangerous, he was guilty of such negligence as entitles a member who was himself without fault to a recovery. Adopting the theory most favorable to the appellee, it must be held that whether there was such an encroachment was a question of fact upon which the judgment of the jury must be invoked, and not a question to he determined by the opinions of witnesses. The distance of the barrel from the wall, the width of the walk, the character of the place, . and the like, were all proper matters of evidence, and, upon such evidence, it was the duty of the jury' to express a judgment, and it was not competent for a witness to assume the functions of the jury, and declare a judgment under the guise of expressing an opinion. Every one knoAVs that opinions are, as a general rule, incompetent. This rule is one of wide sweep, and, although broken by important exceptions, it always prevails where there are no peculiar features of the particular case carrying it from under the general rule and placing it among the exceptions.
The question we have thus generally discussed arises upon the ruling of the trial court, in permitting the appellee’s counsel to propound to him, while on the witness stand', the interrogatory which follows, and in allowing the answer it elicited to go to the jury. The interrogatory reads thus:
“You may state, Mr. Cummins, whether there was sufficient room, between where that barrel was and the wall, for a man to walk with safety ? ”
The court violated the rule forbidding the expression of opinions by witnesses, in allowing this testimony to go to the jury. The question called for an opinion upon two points, one, the negligence of the appellee, the other, the freedom from fault of the appellant. The question could not possibly be answered without embracing in the answer the appellee’s opinion of what one using the walk could safely do, and upon this point there could be no opinion without mentally deciding the extent to which the walk was obstructed, and the degree of care exercised by the person passing along it, so that in answering the question the appellee, of necessity, gave an opinion on two important points upon which it was the exclusive province of the jury to formulate a judgment and give it expression in their verdict. It is unnecessary to refer to authorities in support of the general proposition that the testimony of witnesses must, as a general rule, be confined to the statement of facts, since there is no diversity of opinion upon the general question. It may be necessary — at all' events it is proper — -to refer to the exceptions to the general rule. It is safe to assume at the outset, that where the facts can be fully placed before the jury, opinion evidence, even from experts, is incompetent if the facts are of such a nature that jurors are as well qualified to form an opinion upon them as the witnesses. Ferguson v. Hubbell, 97 N. Y. 507; Milwaukee, etc., R. W. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 472; Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Lathrop, Admr., 111 U. S. 612 (618).
So, too, it is safe to assume that resort to opinion evidence from non-expert witnesses is only proper upon the ground that necessity requires the introduction of that class of evidence. Here there was no necessity for such evidence, inasmuch as the facts as to the unobstructed space, and the like, could have been easily stated to the jury,
"Where, however, the reason for an exception fails, the general rule stands unbroken. That is the case here, as is evident from what has been said, because there is no necessity for resorting to opinion evidence. But even in cases where necessity justifies the expression of an opinion, the opinion can not go to the principal points which the law requires the jury to decide. Loshbaugh v. Birdsell, supra, Yost v. Conroy, 92 Ind. 464; Thompson v. Deprez, 96 Ind. 67; Hughes v. Beggs, 114 Ind. 427.
In this ease, the witness, in answering the question asked, necessarily gave judgment in the form of an opinion, upon a principal point, and thus the rule was violated. It is ingeniously argued by counsel, that if parts of the answer be eliminated, there was no transgression of the rule, but the fallacy of the argument is revealed by the most cursory analysis. There can be no elimination of the parts of the answer, since the answer is responsive to the question, and in the question dwells the infirmity that makes the error. This we say for the reason that the question explicitly required the witness to answer whether there was “ room for a man to walk with safety,” and whether a man could or could not walk with safety, could only be a matter of opinion. A man might safely walk by feeling his way along the wall, and this the witness may have been of the opinion it was the man’s duty to do, but this he could not know as a fact, nor had he a right to directly or in
We refer without further discussion to the cases which follow in support of our conclusion that the testimony of the appellee was incompetent, and it would he, we may add, no difficult task to multiply citations. Dallas v. Sellers, 17 Ind. 479; Thompson v. Deprez, supra; Oleson v. Tolford, 37 Wis. 327; Crane v. Town of Northfield, 33 Vt. 124; City of Parsons v. Lindsay, 26 Kan. 426; Scattergood v. Wood, 79 N. Y. 263; Hopkins v. Indianapolis, etc., R. R. Co., 78 Ill. 32; Seliger v. Bastian, 66 Wis. 521.
It is argued by appellee’s counsel, that if there was error in admitting the testimony, it was a harmless one. This contention can not prevail. The testimony was directed to very material points, and was of importance, so that we can not say that it did not influence the jury. Where evidence is material and bears upon important points in favor of the party who introduces it, the presumption is that it was influential, and that, if incompetent, harm was done in submitting it to the jury. See authorities cited Elliott’s Appellate Procedure, section 594, note 2; section 632, note 3; section 670. The opinion of a witness whose conduct and demeanor impress the jury favorably, going to them under the sanction of the court, may carry as much weight as the statement of a fact, and for this reason it is seldom that incompetent opinion evidence can be said to be harmless. It is true that the court, in admitting evidence, gives no opinion as to its weight or value. Pedigo v. Grimes, 113 Ind. 148-158, and cases cited. But, while this is true, it is also true that where the court admits evidence over objection, it impliedly declares to the
' The court, in ruling upon a question propounded to a witness, made this remark:
“ If this man (meaning the appellant), or anybody who received a rupture of the lung, and then subsequently received one 'that made it worse, I don’t see how the first could make it worse than the second, and the two together more than the one alone.”
This singular and confused statement of the court contains an erroneous expression of the law. If a man is suffering from an injury previously received, and that injury is aggravated by an accident caused by the negligence of a wrongdoer, the aggravation of the injury is sufficient to entitle the injured man to a recovery, if other facts constituting a cause of action are established. Terre Haute, etc., R. R. Co. v. Buck, Admx., 96 Ind. 346, and authorities cited; Ohio, etc., R. R. Co. v. Hecht, 115 Ind., 443, and cases cited; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Snyder, 117 Ind. 435. The remark of the court was improper for the further reason that it expresses a decision upon a question of fact. In giving an expression upon such a question, the court wrongfully invaded the province of the jury.
Remarks made by a judge in the presence of the jury, during the progress of a trial, may, if material and improper, constitute prejudicial error. See authorities cited Elliott’s Appellate Procedure, page 618, note 1.
Other questions are discussed, but, as a new trial must be granted, it is unnecessary to consider them.
Judgment reversed.