21 Colo. 329 | Colo. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first instruction given by the court of its own motion is as follows:
“If the jury believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant, E. W. Bush, was superintendent of the defendants, and had full charge and control of the property and of the men employed therein,’then it was his duty to see that the drift in which deceased was at work was properly and securely timbered, and his failure to do so would be negligence, and his negligence would be the negligence of the other defendants whom he represented, and.he could not delegate this duty to an employé and shift the responsibility for negligence in not properly timbering such drift on to such employé, so that the defendants could claim that the injury occurred by reason of the negligence of a coemployé. The duty to furnish a, safe place for said Varney to ivorlc in was the duty of the defendants. If they failed in that, they were guilty of negligence.” ■
The defendants assign for error the giving of the foregoing instruction, especially the portion which we have italicized. This instruction is not the law. It virtually declares that the duty of the master is to furnish to the servant an absolutely safe place in which to work. In other words, it makes the former an insurer of the safety of the latter. The failure to provide a safe place for the employé to work in is not negligence of his employer, but the jury were, by this instruction, told that it was. The contention of counsel for appellee that the vice in this instruction is not fatal to the judgment, because in other and subsequent instructions the jury are practically told that the employer’s duty requires that he should-furnish a reasonably or ordinarily' safe place for his employé to work in, is plausible, rather than sound. True it is that where the court gives an instruction which contains only a partial, though, so far as it
2. This ruling upon the foregoing assignment of error necessitates a reversal of this case, and renders unnecessary a determination of the numerous other errors discussed. In view, however, of the contingency of another trial, and to save possible error in the court below, we feel constrained to add some suggestions that may be of some assistance to the court and counsel. In a case involving issues such as are raised by the pleadings and evidence in this case, it would seem that so many of the questions, fully discussed by counsel in their briefs, have been settled by repeated decisions of this court that an examination of these cases ought certainly to furnish a satisfactory and safe guide to court and counsel in drawing instructions.
(a) Witnesses for the plaintiff were permitted, over defendants’ objection, to state, in substance, what was the proper method of timbering a drift run in such ground as the evidence shows this one penetrated. Counsel for defendants
(5) The court below struck out certain evidence given by one of the witnesses for the defendants, and refused to admit other evidence offered by the defendants, tending to show that defendants had issued general rules and instructions to its workmen, which provided, in substance, that the workmen who were engaged in running the drift should do timbering whenever they considered it necessary ‘and essential for their safety. Such evidence was, of course, pertinent, and an offer to prove such rules by competent testimony should have been allowed. An examination of the record show's that such attempt was only to establish that such instructions had been given to individual workmen, and no offer was made to show that any general rules or instructions had been issued by defendants or their superintendent, or that knowledge of such directions to individual employés had ever been brought home to the deceased. In this ruling by the court there was no error.
(c) In instructions Nos. eleven, thirteen and fourteen, as asked by the defendants, the court stated to the jury a hypothetical case, based upon the evidence, which, if the jury found to be true, they were told, would prevent a recovery by the plaintiff. The assumed case was one that was intended
(d) We think that Moore was not a fellow servant of
(e) If this case is to be tried again, we think there will not be a repetition of the unusual scene that marked the close of the first trial. In his closing argument to the jury, counsel for plaintiff, actuated, doubtless, by zeal for his client, and possibly carried away by the exuberance of a heated imagination, went outside -of the record, and, at the close of a scathing arraignment of defendants, referred to them as “ living in their mansions, and handling their millions.” The record is silent as to any evidence upon the kind of houses in which defendants live, or the extent of their wealth. Objections were promptly made by counsel for defendants,- and plaintiff’s counsel withdrew the reference, and asked the juiy to strike it from their minds, in which request the court, somewhat mildly, joined with counsel, and told the jury entirely to disregard the statement because it was improper, and inferentially referred to the counsel for plaintiff by remarking that “such statements should not be made in' court to the jury in the argument of this case.” Thereupon
This rather extraordinary and dramatic closing of a trial in a court of justice calls for a few words from us. Great latitude should be allowed counsel in addressing a jury, so that he may fully and fairly present every point in his case; but he should be kept within the limits of the evidence, and not be permitted in his argument to testify, without having been sworn as a witness, or to interject into the case evidence that was never elicited at the trial.
In Brown v. Swineford, 44 Wis. 282,— which decision fully comports with our ideas of professional ethics, — the forcible remarks of Chief Justice Ryan we adopt as our own. The case was an action of tort, calling for exemplary damages, and evidence of the financial ability to pay was admissible, under the decisions of that court. There was no evidence at all upon this point. Defendant, however, was connected with a railroad corporation. In argument to the jury counsel for the plaintiff endeavored to supply the defect in his proof' as to the defendant’s pecuniary ability to respond to a verdict by drawing for his facts upon his unaided imagination, and attributing to the defendant the possession not only of great wealth, but ascribing to him the possession of earthly goods in amount equal to that belonging to the corporation of which defendant himself was only a subordinate officer. For this the supreme court reversed the judgment of the lower court. In that case, as in this, the practice condemned arose in the case of an eminent member of the bar, whose professional
The applause of the audience probably could not have been anticipated, and for such a demonstration no one connected with this ease can be held responsible. In our judgment, the court should have more pointedly rebuked counsel for his violation of professional conduct, and more clearly impressed upon the jury that they should not be influenced thereby. A spontaneous outburst of applause by the audience ought not to have been passed over as only a trivial offense, but they should have been punished in some proper way, or at least severely censured, for their reprehensible interference with the course of justice, and for their evident attempt to influence or coerce the return of a verdict for plaintiff.
The jury returned with their verdict a statement that neither the transgression of counsel nor the applause of the audience influenced them in their deliberation. Possibly not. Possibly the verdict would have been the same had there been no audience present, and had counsel altogether waived his closing argument; but that, without any suggestion or request, so far as the record shows, the jury should have made such an unsolicited and voluntary finding awakens in our minds a fleeting suspicion that their better judgment must have told them that such conduct sometimes, with some other juries, might possibly produce such a result. The question is not, necessarily or primarily, what effect did such things as happened at the close of this trial have in this particular case, but what tendency do they and would they naturally and probably have with juries in general, in arriving at their verdicts ?
The most impartial minds and the most honest men find it difficult to decide correctly and fairly the complicated questions of fact that are submitted for their determination
The foregoing considerations require that the judgment should be reversed and remanded.
Reversed.