115 Neb. 506 | Neb. | 1927
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff had a verdict and judgment against Lancaster county and Central Contractors for $12,000 for personal injuries. Both defendants appealed.
On July 26,1924, the county was constructing a state and federal-aid road on the state highway west of Lincoln between Emerald and the west county line. Central Contractors, a copartnership, was doing the work under a written contract in which the county and the state by its department of public works were the parties of the first part and the contractors were the parties of the second part. The evidence shows that the grading had been completed, at least at the place involved here, and the contractors were hauling and depositing the gravel in piles, as dumped by trucks, on the north side, or shoulder, of the graded portion in the usual manner ready to be spread mechanically over the rest of the grade. They had first begun at the east end of the project, and had dumped gravel on the grade
Numerous errors are assigned and argued by the county and by the contractors separately, many of them applicable alike to both defendants, but we do not find it desirable nor necessary to list them all. They have to do chiefly with instructions to the jury, and refusal to give instructions requested, and with alleged error in the admission of evidence.
The county complains because the court overruled its demurrer and because it refused both at the end of plaintiff’s evidence and at the end of all the evidence to instruct the jury to return a directed verdict in its favor. Section 2746, Comp. St. 1922, makes a county liable for any special damages happening to any person by means of insufficiency or want of repairs of a highway which the county is liable to keep in repair. Under section 8336 (the state highway
The defendant contractors also insist that they are exonerated from liability because the county had assumed, by arrangement between the defendants, the responsibility of spreading the gravel and that the duty of the contractors ended when the gravel was deposited. The written proposal which ripened into the written contract and by the latter was expressly referred to and made a part of the contract was for “56,300 square yards gravel surfacing, in place, 3 inches deep, 26 cents, $14,638.” The specifications which likewise were expressly made a part of the written contract contained provisions from which we excerpt: “The contractor shall provide and maintain proper guards, suitable
The defendants severally offer strong arguments why the case presented by plaintiff on the merits of the evidence should not have been submitted to the jury. While we might think that the general knowledge that roads in Nebraska are under repair in the summer-time, that the fact that plaintiff had already on the morning in question passed over a part of this very project, that if the lights on the motorcycle were reflecting as the law requires and she was not keeping a lookout as ordinary care would dictate, that one driving or riding in the darkness is more liable to meet disaster than in the daylight, and such things might induce us if we were jurors not to have found for plaintiff, yet that was the. province of the trial jury, as selected, and we cannot say that they should have been directed to return a verdict for the defendants or for either of them.
The defendants allege error as to several of the instructions given by the court, and because of the refusal to give instructions requested. The most serious complaint refers to the fifth instruction given by the court on its own mo
We might stop here, but there are other things in the' case, a discussion of which may be helpful if the case be retried. In her amended petition the plaintiff set forth at length and with considerable particularity, as well as in general terms, her injuries, but did not name appendicitis as one of them. In the statement of the pleadings to the jury the court did not mention either appendicitis or the other injuries specifically, but grouped them in the general statement, “and says that she received serious and permanent injuries for which she seeks recovery against the defendants.” On the trial, evidence as to the appendicitis was received and it was sought to connect it with the accident, either directly as the proximate cause eight weeks before the operation, or indirectly through the miscarriage which occurred the next night after the accident. The doctor who amputated plaintiff’s fingers, and who operated for appendicitis, testified from his observance of the case and from his experience; and another doctor, called as an expert, testified in answer to hypothetical questions. Both were cross-examined. Neither was able to express a steadfast opinion that the appendicitis was caused either by the trauma or by the miscarriage. The first doctor, at one point, stated: “Whether the appendicitis naturally followed the injury, or didn’t, I couldn’t state. I say that it could have caused it and no question but what it contributed to it, but whether it caused it I couldn’t say.” That is the only expression of anything approaching positive opinion in the testimony of either doctor that either the accident or the miscarriage caused the appendicitis. The evidence of both is sprinkled with answers, as to whether the accident caused the appendicitis, to the effect that there was “just a possibility,” that it was “possible,” that “there is a chance.”
On the trial the court permitted a witness, over objection, to testify that, on Sunday evening after the accident, which happened on Saturday morning, she saw a road patrolman place a red lantern at the end of the dumped gravel. This testimony should not have been admitted. Evidence of subsequent repairs made or precaution taken after an accident or the infliction of an injury is not admissible to prove antecedent negligence. Pribbeno v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 81 Neb. 657 (citing cases); Tankersley v. Lincoln Traction Co., 101 Neb. 578.
Considerable space in the briefs is devoted to the charge that plaintiff’s counsel went beyond proper limits in bringing before the jury the supposed relations of defendants with an indemnifying insurance company. We find on examination that as to much of the conduct complained of the defendants have either waived their objections in certain matters or have not properly protected themselves so as to take advantage of the error claimed. But several instances remain where they have saved exceptions- which,.
“ ‘Where a plaintiff in a personal injury action seeks by appropriate interrogatories on the cross-examination to discover whether the defendant is indemnified from loss by an insurance company, it is error for the court to sustain an objection to interrogatories which tend to develop the fact on that question.’ Miller v. Central Taxi Co., 110 Neb. 306, reaffirmed and promulgated as a rule of practice.”
Th’at rule is of course binding on us in review of the instant case; but there is no purpose on the part of the court to extend the rule in any respect beyond its literal meaning and beyond the proper implications to be drawn from its words. It does not give license to parties, attorneys, or witnesses, in. the trial of a cause, to go beyond the limits of good faith and that spirit of fair and honest inquiry which is so often glorified as one of our 'national heritages; and it is the office of the trial judges to see that, as long as this rule remains in force, these principles are practiced. We will not say that the conduct of this case in respect of the insurance, duly preserved and here for review, was such as to violate the above rule, but there was some not so preserved that was dangerously near, if not over, the edge of error.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part.
I concur in the reversal on account of the errors pointed out in the opinion, but I do not think the failure to give warning of the gap between the two lines of gravel on the