117 Ky. 841 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion op the couet by
Affirming.
Between 9 and 10 o’clock .on the night of July 11, 1899, appellee, Keher, was riding on a tandem bicycle with a young lady (the lady being in front) along Jackson street, near Green, in Louisville, Ky. They were riding a little to the east of the middle of the street. The place was dark from the shade trees obstructing the electric light. The front wheel of the bicycle struck a rock, 8 by 14 by 20 inches. The wheel was crushed, and both riders were thrown down. The stone was at -the .edge of a mortar bed. The.young lady -was thrown over in the mortar bed, and the appellee, who was on the rear seat, was .thrown into a pile of rock, fractur
On February 23, 1899, the city issued a permit to St. Boniface Church to build a one-story brick and stone church on Green street, near Jackson, and on May 12, 1899, it issued a permit for the building of a three-story brick monastery on the northeast corner of Jackson and Green. By an ordinance of the city regulating the use of public ways it is provided, in substance, that for the purpose of erecting houses or. other improvements adjacent to any street the person making the erection may use not more “than one-third of the width of said street fronting said improvement for material for making and conducting said improvements,” all such obstructions to “be safely guarded in such manner and with sufficient necessary red lights at night as to protect all those traveling or passing upon such street.” (See Compilation of Ordinances 1901, 320, 321.) In erecting the buildings referred to, the contractors had placed in Jackson street a pile of bricks and rock; also a mortar bed, which ex
The court, of its own motion, 'instructed the jury as follows: “(1) The court instructs the jury that it is the
Over tbe objection of tbe city, tbe court gave tbe two following instructions• asked by tbe plaintiff: “(5) If tbe jury find their verdict for tbe plaintiff, they shall award him against both of tbe defendants, or against tbe city of Louisville alone, such a sum of money as they believe from tbe evidence will fairly and reasonably compensate tbe plaintiff for tbe pain and suffering, mental and physical, sustained by him, directly resulting from tbe injuries complained of, and also for the permanent impairment of bis power to earn money in tbe loss of bis right eye, not exceeding the sum of $10,000, tbe amount claimed in tbe petition. If they find a verdict for the defendants, they shall say so, and no more. (6) By 'negligence’ is meant in these instructions tbe failure to observe ordinary care. By 'ordinary care’ is meant a
It is insisted for the city that the two first instructions, taken together, make the right of the appellee to recover ,a verdict against the city turn solely on the fact that the city did not exercise ordinary care to have warning given of the obstruction of the street, and that the jury should have been told that the city was liable only if the city knew of the obstruction, or by ordinary care should have known of it, and also knew that at the time and place of the accident the obstruction was not sufficiently lighted, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known this. It is also complained that the court did not submit to the jury the question whether the city, at the time and place of the accident, kept its street in a reasonably safe condition for persons riding thereon with ordinary care for their own safety. In support of the
The city asked no instructions on the trial. The permit for the erection of the building was, under the ordinance, permission for the contractors to use one-third of the width of the street fronting the improvement for material for making and .conducting the improvement, and, while the ordinance required ■ the contractor or person so using the street to guard the obstruction in such manner and with such light
While the form of instruction 5, if taken alone, would be objectionable, the meaning, when it is read in connection with 3 and ‘4, is perfectly plain. The instruction begins with the words, “If the jury find their verdict for the plaintiff.” Hoertz and the city were the only defendants to the action at the time the instruction was given. If the jury did not find against Hoertz, they could not find for the plaintiff unless they found against the city. The instruction was not, therefor, an intimation from the court that the jury should find against the city. It only gave the measure of damages in case “the jury find their verdict for the plaintiff.” The obstruction of the street, as the uncontradicted testimony showed it to be, manifestly made the street not reasonably safe for the traveling public, and no good could have come to the city from the giving of an instruction on this point which neither party asked on the trial. The rule is that only errors prejudicial to the substantial rights of the party complaining are grounds for reversal. In civil cases the circuit court is not required to give the whole law of the case to the jury in his instructions, but it is incumbent on the litigants to ask such instructions as they deem proper. No good would come from giving to the jury instructions on every conceivable question not desired by either party on the trial because deemed of no value before the jury under the evidence. The court, after laying down in instruction No. 1 correctly the rule that it was the duty of the city to keep its streets reasonably safe for the use of the public, undertook in No. 4 to bring the mind of the jury directly to the question of fact whether ordinary care had been exercised by the city to give
Instruction 6 properly defined contributory negligence, for, as the plaintiff did not know of the obstruction of the street, unless he might by ordinary care have discovered it in time to have avoided injury, he might recover; and he had a right, in the absence of anything indicating the contrary, to assume that the street was safe, or reasonably so. Glasgow v. Gillenwaters (113 Ky., 140, 23 R., 2375), 67 S. W., 381; Pettengill v. Yonkers, 116 N. Y., 564, 22 N. E., 1095, 15 Am. St. Rep., 442.
While the verdict is large, we can not say, under the evidence, it is so large as to indicate passion or prejudice. The plaintiff is a young man at the opening of life. His right eye is entirely destroyed, his left is so affected he can not read with it, he suffered for months most intensely, and his intended career in life is destroyed.
The city did not seek by any pleading to recover against the negligent contractor. The authorities seem to be that in such cases the person using the street under the permit is liable to the .city for any damages the city may sustain by reason of his neglect or failure to comply with the terms of the ordinance. 2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sections 1034, 1035; 2 Smith on Municipal Corporations, section 1305. But, as the .city asserted no claim against the contractors, this question is not here presented.
On the whole case we perceive no substantial error to the prejudice of appellant, wherefore the judgment complained of is affirmed.