80 N.W. 885 | N.D. | 1899
This action was tried to a jury and the trial court after the evidence on both sides was submitted, directed a verdict in favor of th'e defendant. This ruling is the only error assigned in this Court. The case is now before this Court for a second time. In the first appeal there was a similar order, — directing a nonsuit,— which order, however, was based wholly upon the plaintiff’s testimony; no evidence being offered in that trial for the defense. Cameron v. Railway Co., 8 N. D. 124, 77 N. W. Rep. 1016. It appears further that the case has been tried three times. The first trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, which verdict was set aside, and a new trial granted, by the trial court. At the last trial, by stipulation of counsel, the evidence, or a large part thereof, as taken down at the first trial by the stenographer, -was read to the jury, and hence the defendant’s evidence is now, and for the first time, before this Court for consideration. It therefore becomes necessary, to a proper understanding of the case, not only to refer to the facts as stated in the opinion of this Court as reported in the case cited, but to make a new and supplementary presentation of the facts as they are found in this record. For an outline of the facts we refer to the opinion already cited, but for a fuller presentation of the case we will make a resume of the evidence as it now stands in the record.
This action is for the recovery of damages for the alleged negligence of the defendant, which, as is claimed, caused the death of Edward J. Cameron, who was the husband of the plaintiff. The precise grounds of the alleged negligence are, in effect, that the defendant furnished the deceased with a train of cars — to be run and operated under the supervision of the deceased as conductor — which was unsafe, imperfect, and inadequate, in this: That the steps on the left-hand side of the rear end of the sleeping car at the rear end of the train were broken, and had been removed prior to the delivery of said train to the deceased at Minot on the day he was killed; and that said broken and unsafe condition of the train was known, or could have been known, to the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence; but that the said condition of the train was unknown to the deceased. It is further alleged that while the deceased was in the discharge of his duty as conductor of the train, and by reason of defendant’s alleged negligence, the deceased, while said train was moving at great speed, was cast upon the ground, and killed. The complaint further avers that “there was
Despite the contention of the appellant’s counsel to the contrary, we shall hold that there is no substantial conflict in the evidence which establishes the facts as thus far narrated. Counsel for the
We have carefully considered the evidence bearing upon the several propositions of fact last enumerated, and we are inclined to the view that all of them are established by a preponderance of the evidence; but we are unable to accept the view of counsel that there is no evidence whatever which tends to dispute these facts. This is especially true as to the important question of whether the gate was or was not tied with a rope at the point where the accident occurred. There being some conflict in the evidence upon this matter of fact, it would have been the proper course to submit such questions to a jury for determination, were it not for other facts which control the case, and'which were conclusively established by undisputed testimony. We are entirly convinced that the facts in the record completely refute the plaintiff’s charge that the deceased came to his death through the negligence or wrongful acts of the defendant, and our opinion would not be different if the evidence showed beyond dispute — as it does not — that the deceased passed out of the gate in question to his death.- It appears that the deceased not only was the conductor of the train, and as such in charge of it, and of the subordinate trainmen upon it, but it further appears