In this Stаte the rule is settled that an appellate tribunal cannot inquire into the sufficiency of the evidence to support a judgment unless there is an exception to the finding and judgment when tried by the judge without a jury, or a motion for new trial and exception to the overruling of the same where a trial is had by jury. (See Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Peek,
Whilst it is necessary that a motion for new trial should be incorporated in the bill of exceptions where it is dеsired to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings, it is also necessary in such case that the whole evidence shall be therein inсorporated, and it must be so stated. But where the propriety of giving or refusing instructions is sought to be presented, neither a motion for new trial nor all the evidence in the case is required to be inserted. At common law the correctness of the charge of the judge was always subject to review where it was properly inсorporated in the bill of exceptions, as here, and such is the rule declared by the decisions of this State, regardless of the fact that a motion for new triаl is not in the bill of exceptions.
In McClurkin v. Ewing,
In Reichwald v. Gaylord et al.
In Nason v. Letz,
In Schmidt v. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. et al.
In Thompson v. People,
It was the duty of the Appellate Court to determine the correctness of instructions given for the plaintiff on the trial, as well as the correctness of the ruling of the court in refusing instructions asked for the defendаnt, notwithstanding the fact that no motion for a new trial appeared in the bill of exceptions.
For errors of the trial court in giving instructions, the judgment of that court and thе judgment of the Appellate Court will have to be reversed, and we will not discuss the error assigned on the record of the Appellate Court for the refusal of that court to allow the appellant to file its supplemental record with its petition for rehearing.
The fifth instruction given for the appellee states as а proposition of law that it was not negligence, of itself, for O’Keefe to ride on the steps or platform of the car. Whether a person is guilty of negligence is usually a question of fact, to be found by the jury, and an assumption of negligence on the part of the appellant, or that the deceased was not negligent, cannot be stated, under the facts of this case, as a matter of law. What will be deemed reasonable care, in any case, by one who is injured in a collision, must always depend on the peculiar circumstances of the particular case. Whether, a person was using due care at the time he was killed must ordinarily be determined by showing the surrounding facts, so far as it can be done, and submitting the question to the jury.
Other clauses of the fifth instruction, and the sixth and seventh instructions, are erroneous, but cannot be discussed without entering into a discussion of the evidence.
In the condition of the record, with the errors already pointed out in the action of the Appellate and trial courts, which necessitate a reversal, we will not enter on a discussion of the evidence, and the cause will be remanded to the circuit court of Union county for a new trial.
Beversed and remanded.
