151 Mo. App. 330 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Plaintiff, injured in' a collision between a wagon in which he was riding and a street car operated by defendant, claims in his petition that
Two of the instructions given at the request of plaintiff (the first and the sixth) are the subjects of adverse criticism in the brief of counsel for defendant. They are as follows:
“(1) The court instructs the jury that the defendant, in the operation of its cars on Tenth street at its intersection with Tracy avenue, possessed no rights superior to those which the plaintiff possessed in driving his vehicle along Tracy avenue at its intersection with Tenth street.”
“(6) You are instructed that if you find for plaintiff, in arriving at the amount of your verdict, you may take into consideration:
“Second. The impairment to plaintiff’s earning capacity, if any, which you believe from the evidence has resulted from such injury, if any.
“Third. Any reasonable sum of money necessarily expended or incurred for physician, nurse hire and medicines in endeavoring to be healed of his injuries, if you believe from the evidence he expended or incurred any such sum of money, but for such physician, nurse hire and medicines the amount must not exceed two hundred dollars.
“And you will allow him such a sum as you believe from the evidence will be a reasonable and just compensation for such matters, not exceeding, however, the sum of ten thousand1 dollars altogether.”
The first instruction contains nothing but the declaration of an abstract proposition of law. Such instructions should1 be avoided on the ground of their tendency to confuse and mislead the jury. The function of the jury is to decide issues of fact not to pronounce the law uor to apply the law to the facts. An instruction which fails to make application of the rule of law declared to a given hypothesis of fact is subject to the criticism that it invests the jury with the performance of a duty that does not belong to them. Frequently, however, appellate courts allow such instructions to' pass in cases where the court is satisfied that the error was not prejudicial. Such, in effect,, was the view we entertained in the recent case of Welland v. Street Railway, 129 S. W. 441.
In the present case we think the error was prejudicial. The rule declared in the instruction, though sound, was foreign to any issue of fact presented by the pleadings and evidence. The question of whether or not the street railway company had a superior or only an equal right to the use of the crossing to that
Further we find that in the second clause of the sixth instruction the element of damage submitted is unsupported by evidence. "What was said by the Supreme Court in the case of Davidson v. Transit C'o., 211 Mo. 320, about a similar instruction is appropriate and decisive. See, also, the opinion of this court in the recent case of Ingles v. Railway, 129 S. W. 493,--Mo. App.--. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.