64 Fla. 69 | Fla. | 1912
Eaton brought an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received because of the negligence of the servants of Girt-man Brothers by being struck in the face by an iron rod projecting from the side of a wagon of the defendants, while the plaintiff was going in the opposite direction by the side of the wagon riding on a bicycle in a city street.
A demurrer to the declaration was overruled and trial was had on a plea of not guilty and special pleas of con-
The declaration does not appear to be subject to the demurrer, and if the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict the other assignments of error need not be considered.
In this case there are no statutory presumptions and the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove the injuries to have been received as a proximate result of the defendant’s negligence as alleged. If the plaintiff contributed proximately in any appreciable degree to the injury he cannot recover. If the legal effect of the evidence is to show a lack of negligence as alleged on the part of the defendant, or to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff there can be no recovery.
The evidence affecting the liability of the defendant for damages is as follows: The plaintiff testified: “As I was going down town I saw the delivery wagon belonging to J. D. Girtman and G. G. Girtman, the defendants herein, approaching me from the opposite direction, going in the direction of the Miami River. When I first saw the wagon I did not see any iron rod; I saw a negro driving the wagon and as I got close to the wagon I noticed there were some Indians in the wagon, I do not know how many. The wagon was traveling south of the center of 12th street and in about three or four feet of a street railway line. I endeavored to pass between the wagon and the street railway line. There was ample room for me to pass if the wagon had had nothing projecting from it. The road was a little rough adjacenr to the street railway line and I was compelled to look down toward the ground in passing. After I had passed the front wheel, and before reaching the rear wheel, I
Mr. P. O. Gautier testified: “I saw Mr. Eaton imme.diately after he received an injury from being struck by .an iron rod. His condition was very bad and he was bleeding and seemed to be in great agony from the wound received in his eye. He was midway between the curb stone and Girtman’s wagon. I saw a wagon of Girtman Bros, at or about the place where E. L. Eaton was hurt.
Cross-examination: “I was near the bridge on 12th street. The road was in good condition where I found Mr. Eaton. I don’t know who was driving the wagon, there was an Indian or two in the back part of the wagon. There was not any Indian holding any iron rod when I noticed them. The iron rod simply seemed to be loaded on the wagon protruding way out in front. I saw an Indian, as here before stated, the rod was protruding out of the front of the wagon on the south side of the horse several feet. I did not notice the rod protruding out of the back of the wagon.”
Mr. L. S. Clopton for the defendant testified: “I loaded the wagon which Mr. Eaton claimed was conveying the iron rod with which he collided. At the time the wagon was loaded no iron rod was placed therein. The wagon was a very tall wagon with side boards all around which extended from 2J to 3 feet above the floor. The wagon was loaded with groceries and supplies for the Indians. At the time the wagon left the store of Girtman Bros., for whom I was working, it was properly loaded and there was nothing in the wagon that protruded or projected out of the wagon on either side or in front thereof. As the wagon was pulling away I saw an Indian named
Tom Jackson for the defendant testified: “I was working for Girtman Bros, in 1906 at the time Mr. E. L. Eaton was injured. At that time I was driving their delivery wagon. When the wagon left the store, just before Mr. Eaton was injured, there was no iron rod in the wagon. The wagon was loaded with groceries up about level with the top of the sides. The wagon was very high from the road and the seats raised from two to three feet above the Moor of the wagon. The entire body of the wagon was full and there was nothing in the
Mr. J. D. Girtman for the defendants testified: “I am a member of the firm of Girtman Bros. I had worked at my store during the early morning and about eleven o’clock drove out to my grove. I was present when the Indians were buying their groceries and supplies but was not present when they were loaded- into the wagon. I did not know that any Indian had got into the wagon or that any iron rod had been placed therein until I heard that E. L. Eaton had been injured and that he claimed to have run into a rod supposed to have been carried in my wagon. After the injury occurred I went to the place where it occurred and examined the lay of the ground. A street railway line had recently been built which took
It is the duty of the court in considering the motion for new trial on the ground that verdict is not supported by the evidence to determine whether the evidence is legally sufficient to sustain the finding.
If the evidence does not show negligence of the defendant’s servants that proximately caused the injury, or if contributory negligence appears the judgment must be reversed.
Mr. Eaton testifies that he was struck by something projecting from the wagon as he endeavored to pass be
Mr. Gautier testified that, (apparently after the injury) he saw the iron rod on the wagon; it was somewhat crosswise in the wagon, protruding out in front of the wagon several feet; the iron rod simply seemed to be loaded on the wagon protruding way out in front; there was an Indian or two in the back part of the wagon. No Indian was holding the iron rod when he noticed them.
This evidence does not show actionable negligence on the part of the defendant. It is not negligence per se for an iron rod in a wagon to protrude from the wagon as it passes along the street.
Mr. Clopton for the defendant testified that he loaded the wagon and that no iron rod was placed thereon; that at the time the wagon left the store it was properly loaded and there was nothing in the wagon that protruded or projected out of the wagon on either side or in front thereof; that as the wagon was pulling away, he saw an Indian carrying a rod in his hand about eight or ten feet long, jump in the back end of the wagon; that the last he saw of the wagon, the Indian was riding in the back and the rod was lying on top of the merchandise in the wagon and protruded out behind the wagon about two feet; that it did not protrude out in front, neither did it protrude on either side; that it appeared to him that the rod was safely stored on top of the merchandise in such a manner that no one could be injured thereby
Tom Jackson, the defendant’s driver, testified that when he left the store there was no iron rod in the wagon and there was nothing in the wagon that protruded from or projected over the sides, either in front or out or either side; that he did not know when the Indian got on the wagon, he did not see either one of them until Mr. Eaton was hurt.
Negligence of the defendant’s servants does not appear, but on the contrary there is evidence that ordinary and reasonable care was exercised by them. If the plaintiff was not negligent in not observing the protruding iron rod before it struck him, the driver apparently did not know of the presence of the iron rod on the wagon and Mr. Clopton, who saw the Indian get on the rear of the wagon with the iron rod had no reasonable ground to suppose the presence of the Indian and the rod on the wagon would cause an injury to a bicycle rider on the street.
The driver denies that he said to Mr. Eaton “that he had told them at the store not to load said rod on the wagon in that way;” and one witness besides the driver testified that no iron rod was put on the wagon at the store.
The condition of the street was as noticeable to the bicycle rider as to the wagon driver, and each was required to exercise due care for the safety of himself and others in using the streets.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.