This was an action for personal injuries resulting in the death of John W. Eeed, alleged to have been sustained by reason of the appellant’s negligence and without any negligence on the part of the decedent. The trial resulted in a special verdict in the form of interrogatories and answers returned by the jury. The first alleged error of the trial court was in charging the jury that, “if the evidence is evenly balanced as to any fact inquired about in an interrogatory, then you should find that such fact does not exist.” The burden rested upon the appellee to prove by a preponderance of the evidence the alleged negligence of the appellant, and that the decedent was free from contributory negligence. To sustain this burden it was indispensable that the special verdict should find facts enforcing the legal inference of negligence on the one side, and freedom from negligence on the other. No fact tending to establish either the conclusion of negligence on the part of the appellant, or of due care on the part of the decedent, could be found upon “evenly balanced” evidence. These propositions are so thoroughly settled in the law of this State as to admit of no doubt.
The theory of the case was that the appellant was negligent in running a street car without a gate or barrier on the front platform next to the poles suspending the trolley wire; that the decedent'was employed by the appellant as a road officer with the duty’ to inspect cars while in use and direct their repair and improvement, including the addition of gates,
Relating to the question of contributory negligence, the jury were asked and answered the following: “Did" said decedent at the time and place mentioned enter the wrong car with the headlight by mistake? Answer.' No.” “When decedent passed through the door of said car, or on to the front platform thereof, could he see, by looking, that the end of said platform toward the south was open? Answer. No.” “Did decedent, immediately after he was recognized by said motorman, endeavor to get off of said car with the headlight? Answer. No.” “At the time said Reed stepped upon the platform, could he see that the safety gate was not on the side next to the pole? Answer. No.” “Was the fact that the safety gate was not upon the front end of said car, upon the side next to said poles, known to said Reed at that time? Answer. No.” These inquiries were as to primary or subsidiary facts having more or less influence upon the ultimate fact, namely, did Reed exercise that degree of care which a man of ordinary care and prudence would have exercised under like circumstances? As to this ultimate fact there were few other interrogatories and answers, and these were as to Reed’s duty to inspect running cars, and order them in for repairs; the rainy and dark condition of the evening; that he knew the condition of the track, the position of the poles, and the swaying motion of the cars; that the headlight was for car numbered 542, while he carried it upon car
Whether the present is a case in which the jury were authorized to draw the inference we need not decide, but it is without any doubt that the inference is never permitted without the primary facts, or those Which give the inference its support. If it were otherwise, the duty of the court to pass upon the facts might be foreclosed in every case by the return of the jury of only the ultimate or inferential facts of the want of care on one side, and the exercise
It is not claimed that the question of the deceased’s opportunities to know, and of his actual knowledge, of the dangerous condition of the car, were unimportant in considering his care. Nor could it be said that the inquiries as to whether he had taken the headlight upon the wrong car, and, when he recognized the motorman, endeavored to get off,, the car, had no bearing upon his care. These important questions were decided by the jury against the appellant. Under the direction of the court the decision may have been' upon evenly balanced evidence. It cannot be said that every negative answer of the jury was not upon the conclusion that the evidence was evenly balanced. Nor can it be said that the ultimate fact was not drawn from these very negatives. Taking these negatives, without reference to the instruction, the court would accept them as in a great measure, if not entirely, requiring the inference of care on the part of Reed. Without these negatives the findings of fact upon which to predicate the inference of care would be exceedingly vague and