46 Ark. 207 | Ark. | 1885
The appellants were the owners of a cotton gin and grist mill combined. The building was set upon posts, leaving the space beneath open. In this open space they dug a pit for their cotton press. The appellee’s cow fell into the pit and was killed. He sued the appellants and obtained judgment for $40, the value of the cow. The appeal is prosecuted to reverse this judgment.
The entire charge should be set out. It would be manifestly unfair, in many instances, to judge the charge by an isolated part of it; and in order to determine correctly whether it was error to refuse to instruct the jury as requested, we should be informed what instructions were •given. It often happens that a request to charge the jury is properly refused, though in itself unobjectionable, because the same phase of the case is already covered in the intended charge. It is not error to refuse to multiply instructions on a single point, and as every reasonable presumption is indulged in favor of the action of the trial ■court, we infer, in a state of record like this, that the court ■declined to give the instructions asked, if they are in them-■unobjectionable, because the jury were already sufficiently instructed on the points touched by them. Error to reverse a j udgment must appear affirmatively, otherwise everything is presumed to have been righfully done.
The' appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence in turning his cow out upon the commons remote from i,he gin (L. R. & F. S. Ry. v. Finley, 37 Ark., 562), and there was no testimony upon which to base the instructions asked upon that point.
No objection was made at the trial to the introduction of any testimony, and the point now pressed cannot be made here for the first time.
Let the judgment be affirmed.