160 Ind. 125 | Ind. | 1903
This action was brought by appellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the negligent act of appellant in starting its car while appellee, a passenger, was in the act of alighting therefrom. The case went to the jury on the general denial.
1. At the proper time appellant tendered and requested thq court to give to the jury twenty-four instructions. The court refused to give the fourth, seventh, eighth, eleventh, twenty-second, and twenty-fourth, and gave all the others as asked, except the twenty-third, which was given as modified. The action of the court in rejecting these instructions is the first question presented. The twenty-second was not germane. The only negligence complained of is the violent and sudden starting of the car, without warning, while the plaintiff was on the running-hoard, in the act of getting off, whereby she was thrown to the ground and injured. The twenty-second proposition was, in effect, that the plaintiff, so far as this case is concerned, assumed all the risk of stepping or walking over the street in the condition it was then in. The conduct of the plaintiff, and her relation to the peril in walking over the street after she had left the car, had nothing to .do with the case, and the instruction requested on that point was properly refused. The other requests refused, while generally containing true expressions of the law, were all given, in- substance, by the court, in numbers submitted to the jury of its own motion. The modified instruction is as follows: “If you further find from the evidence that the negligence of the plaintiff, in any respect, caused or contributed to her injury (in such a way as to he the proximate cause thereof), you must find for the defendant, even though the defendant also he negligent as charged.” The modification consisted of inserting the words within the parenthesis. The modifying words are subject to at least a verbal, if not a more serious objection; hut, as the cause will have to he reversed for another reason, we deem it unprofitable to discuss it.
Eleven of the instructions given by the court are also challenged. They consist in the definition of negligence,
2. The record shows that Sarah Johnson, a witness for the plaintiff, in her direct examination, having described the falling of the plaintiff from the car to the street, and witness’ assistance in helping plaintiff up, was asked and permitted to answer, over the objection of the defendant, the following question: “Was anything said there by you to the conductor while she [meaning plaintiff] was cm the ground, about them stopping the car, or Mrs. Whitaker’s falling? A. Yes, sir; I said when she first fell, 'if you had stopped and let her off, this would not have occurred.’ ” The conductor made no reply, as is shown by what immediatély followed. Utterances and exclamations of participants, or of persons acting in concert, made immediately before or after or in the execution of an act, which go to illustrate the character and quality of the act, are
In the last case cited the plaintiff fell through an open trap-door in the sidewalk. On the trial for negligent injury, the plaintiff was permitted to testify that after he was helped out of the hole by the defendant’s servant, who had left the trap-door open, a man came along and remarked to the defendant’s servant: “That is a very careless way to leave that, young fellow.” Held to constitute reversible error.
In Senn’s case the father did not see the accident, and reached the place within two or three minutes after its occurrence. He was asked on the trial what he said to the driver, and answered: “I said to him, Tt was your careless driving.’ ” The remark was held to be no part of the res gestae, and inadmissible.
The witness Johnson was wholly disconnected with the occurrence. She had testified to having been but a few feet away, in the act of crossing the street, when the car arrived at the crossing and stopped, and to having seen the plaintiff
We are unable to say that the evidence did the defendant no harm. The most prominent question in controversy was whether the car stopped and remained stationary until after the plaintiff had alighted, and that she fell from stumbling in the street after she had left the car, or whether, while in the act of descending from the running-board, the car’s sudden and violent movement forward threw her to the ground. There was a greater number of witnesses who testified for the defendant in this contention than for the plaintiff, and it is by no means clear that the observations of the witness, expressed within a minute of the accident, did not result in the jury giving more weight to her testimony than they would otherwise have found it entitled to.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant appellant a new trial.