44 Kan. 384 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court- was delivered by
This was an action brought before a justice of the peace of Pratt county, by J. H. V. Brown, against the Chicago, Kansas & Nebraska Railway Company, for injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff through the negligence of one of the employés of the railway company. At the time when the alleged injuries occurred the plaintiff was employed as a section-man under Daniel Shanahan, the
“That on or about the 13th day of December, 1887, while plaintiff and the said Daniel Shanahan were engaged in operating and propelling a hand-car of defendant upon the railroad of defendant in said Pratt county, Kansas, the said Daniel Shanahan carelessly and negligently, and without the fault or negligence of the plaintiff, pushed and displaced a certain water cask, keg, or small barrel, standing upon said handcar, so as to cause the said cask, keg, or small barrel to take a position immediately under the handle of said hand-car which plaintiff was holding and operating, so that two of the fingers of plaintiff’s right hand were caught on the downward stroke of said handle, between said handle of said hand-car and the top of said cask, keg, or small barrel, and the said fingers of said plaintiff were thereby crushed, cut and lacerated, and the bone of one of said fingers fractured.”
The case was taken to the district court of Pratt county, where it was tried before the court and a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $109.41; and the defendant, as plaintiff in error, brings the case to this court for review.
It is certainly doubtful whether any culpable negligence was shown as against Shanahan, or as against any railroad company. If any such negligence was shown, it was shown wholly and entirely by the testimony of the plaintiff below, Brown, and wholly and entirely as against Shanahan. It appears that on the evening of December 13, 1887, at about 6 o’clock, Shanahan and Brown were returning from their work by means of a hand-car, which they themselves operated and propelled. They were moving eastwardly — Shanahan in front, and Brown in the rear. An empty water keg was standing on the car, about the middle of the car east and
“I, being behind, had one hand in the center; there were three places, one in the center and one at each end, and I sometimes, in order to ease my hand, sometimes took the center bearing. I had to get on at the right-hand side, and I got on at the center place, and had my left hand in the center hole. The keg was between me and Shanahan. My right hand was directly behind the keg, and the keg was directly behind Shanahan. That was how we propelled the hand-car. After I had got on, and the linch-pin was found, they did not wait for us, and the others had worked their hand-car so fast we were losing ground, and Shanahan made an effort to propel the hand-car more rapidly, and in order to do so gave himself a wide swing, and placed his foot on the keg. He was very thickly dressed — had on an overcoat; I don’t know how many shirts and pants, and thick pants over them. In making the effort to propel the hand-car he threw the keg, throwing it under my handle.
“ Ques.: "Where was Mr. Shanahan with reference to the keg ? Ans.: East of the keg. Shanahan struck against it and threw it back.
“Q. With what? A. I think his feet, or it may be with his leg. He made this big swing to work faster, and pushed against the keg both.
“Q. You think it was his feet, then? A. His feet and body.
“Q. Were you looking at the keg? A. I was, sir; I saw the keg and Shanahan too.
“Q,. And Shanahan too? A. Yes, sir; I saw Shanahan’s feet and body push the keg.
“Q,. You saw it before it came under the handle? A. Yes. sir: I did. sir.
*388 “Q,. You saw it wheu it started ? A. I did, sir; it did not take much time.”
Brown also testified that during all the time he worked on the railway he noticed the keg; that “it was one of the things to look after; it was every man’s duty to look about to watch the things on the car.” He also testified as follows: “I could swear I noticed it ninety-nine hundredths of the time.” Shanahan testified that he did not move the keg, nor even touch it. He did not know what moved it. Shanahan also testified that he told Brown to keep a sharp lookout for the keg, and to go from the end where he was and to the north side, and he would be all right. Brown, however, in his testimony denied all this.
During the time while Brown worked upon the railroad, Shanahan, the section foreman, kept a book entitled “ Chicago, Kansas & Nebraska Eailway Company, St. Joseph & Iowa Bail-road Company, lessee, time-roll,” etc., in which book Brown, as Shanahan’s clerk, kept the time of service of the different section-men, Brown himself making the entries therein. In all probability the time-checks were made out in the name of the same railroad company.
It is also claimed that the court below erred in giving the following, among other instructions, to the jury:
“Our statute provides that every railroad company organized or doing business in this state shall be liable for all damages done to any employé of such company, in consequence of any negligence of its agents, or by any mismanagement of its engineers or other employés, to any person sustaining such damage; and if you believe, from the evidence in this case, that the injury complained of by plaintiff occurred in consequence of any negligence or mismanagement of any agent or employé of defendant, and without any greater want of carefulness on the part of plaintiff than was reasonably to be expected from a person of ordinary caution in the situation in which the plaintiff was at the time of said injury, then*390 your verdict should be for the plaintiff; but if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was, at the time of the injury, guilty of contributory negligence — in other words, that his own negligence contributed to said injury — then the plaintiff cannot recover in this action; the law, however, does not require the greatest care and caution, but only such reasonable care, such as a man of ordinary prudence would exercise under similar circumstances; and, although you may find that the plaintiff was guilty of slight negligence, yet if you believe from the evidence that there was great negligence on the part of the defendant, causing said injuries complained of, then such slight negligence on the part of the plaintiff would not defeat his right of recovery in this action.”
On the side of the plaintiff, however, it is said that this instruction was not properly excepted to. After a copy of all the instructions is given in the record numbered from 1 to 6, then the following language is used: “And the said instructions from 1 to 6 inclusive, are all the instructions given by the court to the jury in this case; . . . to the giving of which instructions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, and to each of them severally, the defendant then and there excepted.” The first instruction includes what is above quoted, and the figure “I,” representing its number, is placed nearly in the middle of the instruction, and not at the beginning where it should be placed, and what we have quoted comes before the figure, and for this reason it is claimed that the instruction was not properly excepted to. It is clear, however, that the whole of this instruction was intended to be numbered “I,” and the whole of it was intended to be excepted to, and we think the court and the parties so understood it.
Other questions are presented in this case, but we do not think that it is necessary to discuss them.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.