17 Kan. 145 | Kan. | 1876
The opinion of the -court was delivered by
This action was tried and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff upon a petition, of which the material allegations are as follows:
“The plaintiff, Jerome Kunkel, complains of the said Kansas Pacific Eailway Company, the defendant herein, for that the said defendant was, on August 18th 1869, and from that time till now has been, a common carrier of, and in the business of carrying, passengers on its railroad, in the state of Kansas, in the county of Jefferson, for pay; that on said 18th of August 1869, the said defendant undertook and promised to carry this plaintiff from the city of Topeka, in the county of Shawnee, in said state of Kansas, to the town of Medina, in said Jefferson county, for the sum of one dollar, which said sum was then and there duly paid to the said defendant by this plaintiff, and this plaintiff went on board the car or carriage of the said defendant, on and under and by virtue of said agreement, and was conveyed in said carriage from the said city of Topeka eastwardly towards said town of Medina; but, in violation of its said contract and agreement, the said defendant refused to stop its said carriage for this plaintiff to get down at said town of Medina, but carried this plaintiff past the said town of Medina, and ordered and directed this plaintiff to get down from said carriage more than a mile from said town of Medina, where*165 there was no regular stopping-place or station for passengers to get on or off the train, and ho platform or other convenience to step on; and when this plaintiff attempted to dismount from the said carriage, in obedience to the said order and direction of the said defendant, the said defendant, without notice to this plaintiff, violently and suddenly started their said carriage and with great force threw this plaintiff down from the said carriage to the ground, and wounded, bruised and beat him, this plaintiff, and greatly injured him by said wounds and bruises; of which injuries the plaintiff has not yet recovered, to the damage of this plaintiff in the sum of five thousand dollars.”
“7. It is the duty of the jury to reconcile, if possible, the-testimony of witnesses, so as to make them all testify truly but if in this cause there is an irreconcilable conflict in th& testimony of witnesses, and plaintiff is in conflict with the-testimony of disinterested witnesses, the law rather presumes that the plaintiff has been influenced by his interests to speak untruly, and that the disinterested witnesses are entitled to the confldence of the jury. Disinterested witnesses are entitled'to more credit than interested witnesses.”
The court had at the instance of the defendant already given this instruction:
“ 6. The plaintiff is an interested witness in this cause. He is interested in the whole amount of any possible recovery, and in' all the costs in the cause. His credibility is directly in question. Interested witnesses may be more readily suspected of prevaricating, or even testifying falsely in their own behalf, than witnesses who have no interest in the cause.”
The judgment will be affirmed.