102 Tenn. 409 | Tenn. | 1899
There are a number of assignments of error filed by plaintiff, Burke, but it is unnecessary to set these out in detail. It is sufficient to say they cover the errors complained of, which are decisive of the case. They are mainly directed against the charge of the Court below. Among other charges the plaintiff complained of as error were these: The Court, -at the outset of his charge and as a concise summary of the necessities of plaintiff’s case, says: “That you may have the material points of the case fairly before you, so that you may apply the evidence properly to them, the Court will now state to you what the material points of this case are:
“1. Mr. Burke, the plaintiff, must establish to your satisfaction, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he was exercising the care and caution of an ordinarily careful and prudent man in the manner in which he was using the crossing at the corner of Main and Madison Streets at the time of the accident. ’ ’
This first prerequisite, as declared by the Court, to a recovery is, in effect, to throw at once the burden of proof upon the plaintiff to show that he was in the exercise of the care and caution of an ordinarily careful and prudent man at the time of the accident, and deprives him, at the very outset of the case, of the presumption that every man of sound mind will ordinarily avoid personal injuries.
This very question, upon whom the burden of
The Court quotes Judge Dillon (2 Dillon Mun. Cor., Sec. 1026), as adopting this latter view as the better one, as follows: “That where the plaintiff’s contributory fault does not appear upon his testimony, thé burden of proof to establish it rests upon the defendant; in other words, the plaintiff is not bound to pi’ove affirmatively that he was himself free from negligence,” saying, “We regard this as an accurate statement of the rule.” Following this case, this charge of the Judge was erroneous.
The second prerequisite to recovery, as given in the charge, was as follows:
“2. He must establish to your satisfaction, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant,*413 Smith, was not exercising the care and caution of an ordinarily prudent man in the way in which he was driving his horse upon and along Madison Street, and that Smith’s negligence was the sole cause of the injury.”
This charge, in itself, totally ignores the question of remote and proximate cause, and needs no citation of authority in support of the suggestion that it is clearly erroneous. True the Court in the subsequent portions of his charge, and in another, branch of the charge, modifies this portion quoted, and lays down the correct rule, and if this was the only error complained of we would be slow to reverse on this alone, but, looking further, we find the Court further charged the jury, in defining in what negligence consisted, as follows: “It consists in using the street without looking and seeing how it is being used by others, when, by looking, anyone of ordinarily good eyesight could have seen how the street was being used and what was the probability of a collision. ’ ’
This part of the charge applies the rule as laid down between street cars and persons walking or in vehicles, and could have but little application to persons about to cross in front of vehicles not easily to be seen, by reason of obstructions or otherwise.
Again, after saying that Burke could presume that others would see him after he left the sidewalk, etc., says: “Smith had the right to presume that Burke or anyone else crossing Madison at Main