97 Neb. 439 | Neb. | 1914
Plaintiff is administrator of 'the estate of Charles B. Harris, deceased. The action is to recover damages to the next of kin by reason of the death of Harris while in the employment of defendant.
On the 25th of April, 1910, the deceased, with another workman, and a foreman were driving piles with an ordinary pile driver, operated by horse-power, on the premises of the Union Refining Company in Omaha. After a pile
The verdict is said to be so. excessive that it must have been the result of passion or prejudice.
A few years before Harris had lived in North Dakota with his wife and three children, two sons and a daughter. The wife died. The family was kept together for a short
Complaint is made of an instruction given with respect to expert evidence. We find no error in this instruction, which is widely different from that given in Hayden v. Frederickson, 59 Neb. 141.
Complaint is made of instruction No. 6. The jury were told that in order to recover the plaintiff must establish that the toggle-bar was of insufficient strength, and then proceeded: “Should the plaintiff so prove, and, it not appearing that the deceased assumed the risk that caused his ■death or was guilty of contributory negligence, plaintiff would be entitled to a verdict at your hands,” etc. It is said that by this language “the court told the jury that neither contributory negligence nor assumption of risk appeared from the evidence.” The phrase evidently means “and, if it does not appear,” etc. We doubt whether this expression misled the jury, but it would avoid the possibility of misapprehension to change its form upon another ■trial. It is possible that jurors of foreign birth, unused to our idioms, might mistake the meaning.
The trial court was correct in holding that it was improper for the plaintiff, upon rebuttal, to attempt to prove that the toggle-bar was not sufficient and was not a usual and customary appliance. This should have been done upon the main case. As the case now stands, with the testimony upon this point, of a single witness who had comparatively little experience with pile drivers upon the one side, and that of a number of experienced bridge builders, some of them disinterested, upon the other, it is a close question whether the evidence supports the verdict. Upon a new trial the condition of the evidence in this respect-may be different.
Complaint is made that the court did not properly state the issues. We are again moved to criticize the practice of copying the pleadings in full as a method of stating the-issues to the jury. In this case the trial judge, in instruction No. 5 gave a clear, succinct and satisfactory statement of the issues as to negligence which the jury were
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.