24 Colo. App. 406 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1913
During tlie month, of August, 1905, the Denver & Pueblo .Construction Co., under contract with the city and
“Well, there was through the block.there. I could not say exactly whether they were right near West Tenth avenue or not, but in the block generally, in many instances and in many places, but I would not generalize right at that point, because I do not remember.”
The testimony of the witness Clapp is a mass of general conclusions, too indefinite to aid the court or jury in any manner.
At the point in the street where the alleged accident occurred there were three depressions, according to the testimony of the plaintiff in error, and only two according to the testimony of Gfeorge E. Randolph, president of the Board of Public Works of the city, who made a special examination of the grounds soon after the accident. Plaintiff in error testified that he knew there was a hole in the street about three feet long, one and one-half feet wide and from five to eight inches deep, and, in trying to avoid this hole, he rode into a second hole about three feet to the west, and about two feet further south on the street, which was about eighteen-inches long, eight to ten inches wide and three or four inches deep; that the third hole was smaller than either of the other two, was only one or
“By striking the hole I guess, I don’t know.”
He further testified that he never rode over the street again, and there is no evidence before ns that he ever saw it after the accident. Mr. Randolph, president of the Board of Public Works, secured from the plaintiff in error a description of the alleged defects where it was said the accident occurred, and officially visited and inspected the same, some time after the accident, and testified as follows:
“I looked around carefully to see what could be the basis of the claim, and the only things that I saw were two depressions, might be called depressions, one nearer the curb and one nearer the middle of the street. The first one perhaps three feet in diameter and the one in the middle of the street larger. I should think both of them possible three inches at the deepest, down below the ordinary surface of the street and running’ to nothing at the outer edge of each circle. * * * and from there I went back to Mr. Koch and asked again whether the condition of the street was the same now as it was then, and he said that it was; that it was in the same condition when I saw it as it was when the accident occurred.”
Plaintiff in error, in rebuttal, gave his version of his conversation with Randolph as follows:
“He says to me, ‘Is the street in the same condition now that it was then?’ I says, ‘No, I think that has been somewhat filled up now. Some sand Mowed in.’ ”
There seems to be no doubt that both parties to this action knew of the general condition of Sofith Tenth street at the time of the alleged accident, but neither
The city is not required to maintain its streets in a perfect condition, but only in a reasonably safe condition for travel, and we do not find that the plaintiff in error has shown by a preponderance of the evidence, or at all, that South Tenth Street was, at or near the place described in the complaint, other than in a reasonably safe condition for travel at the time of the alleged accident. It is true that the plaintiff in error and his witness Clapp made general statements that the block in which this alleged accident occurred was full of holes, but Clapp
Counsel for plaintiff in error, however, contends that the trial court committed numerous errors, without which the jury might have rendered a different verdict.
Assignments 1, 2, 3 and 4 are directed against the alleged improper exclusion of testimony. After examining the record and these assignments, we do not think any reversible error was committed by the trial court in this respect.
The fifth assignment of error is based upon the ruling of the court in allowing the witness Randolph to testify that the plaintiff in error admitted to him that the street was in the same condition when the witness examined it as- it was at- the time of the accident. The reasons assigned by counsel for this alleged error are that the question was not proper re-direct examination, and was asked for the purpose of impeaching the plaintiff in error without laying the proper foundation, by establishing time, place, persons present, etc. The order of the examination was a matter within the discretion of the court, which we think was properly exercised, and the admissions sought to be elicited fell within the rule
Assignments 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 are based upon refusals of the court to give instructions tendered by the plaintiff in error, but, as we think the jury was properly instructed on the material questions involved, and believing that substantial justice has been done through the verdict of the jury, we do not feel justified in further extending this opinion on the assignments above mentioned.
Assignments 11,12 and 13 are directed to the alleged errors of the court in giving instructions to the jury. We think the instructions complained of fairly informed the jury of the law applicable to the facts presented in the record.
Assignment 12 is based upon the giving of Instruction Number 9 pertaining to contributory negligence. The objection made at the time was based upon the alleged absence of evidence to which the instruction could apply, and we should not reverse the judgment on any error not called to the attention of the trial court. The argument of counsel in this court, however, seems to be directed to their contention that the instruction recognizes degrees of negligence. It is true that there is no direct evidence that is made specifically applicable to contributory negligence, but the facts are stated attending the accident, and it then becomes a question for the jury under all the circumstances, to determine, first, whether the defendant in error was negligent, and secondly, if negligent, whether the negligence of the plaintiff in error contributed to the cause of the accident. We think, under the circumstances, that no injurious error resulted from the giving of this instruction. However, we think the phrase “in any degree” might well have
“If you find that the conduct of the plaintiff in any degree contributed to the accident, then the case is one of mutual fault, and the law will neither cast all the consequences upon the defendant, nor will it attempt any apportionment thereof, and in such case the plaintiff should not recover.”
Not only our courts, but. most of the courts of the country have discarded the doctrine of comparative negligence. However, the law writers and the courts very generally state the rule in substance as follows:
“That a plaintiff cannot recover for the negligence of the defendant, if his own want of care or negligence has in any degree contributed to the result complained of.” — Needham v. S. F. & S. J. R. Co., 37 Cal., 409-419, citing Gay v. Winter, 34 Cal., 153.
The text in Cyc. reads:
“The general rule is that if the negligence of the injured person contributed in any degree no recovery can be had. * * * The law will not attempt to measure the degree.” — 29 Cyc., 511; Chicago City Railway Co. v. Margaret Canevin, 72 Ill. App., 84; Mattimore v. Erie City, 144 Pa., 24, 22 Atl., 817; Gonzales v. New York & Harlem R. R. Co., 38 N. Y., 440, 98 Am. Dec., 58; Banning v. Chi. R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 89 Ia., 81, 156 N. W., 277; Murch v. Con. R. Co., 29 N. H., 9, 61 Am. Dec., 631; Potter v. Chi. & N. W. Ry. Co., 21 Wis., 372, 94 Am. Dec. 548; Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Bynum, 139 Ala., 397, 36 So., 736.
Counsel cite many cases to the effect that comparative degrees of negligence submitted to a jury is injurious error. That is conceded by our own supreme court, and even the state of Illinois, where the supreme court unwit
“That there can be no recovery if plaintiff’s negligence contributed in any degree to the injury.” — Chicago City Railway Co. v. Margaret Canevin, 72 Ill. App., 84.
The rule in this state is substantially in harmony with that in the states above cited in support of the general rule. Our supreme court stated the rule as follows:
“Instruction Number 14 recognizes this qualification, and in the main states the rule correctly, but is erroneous in limiting its application to a case where the injured party was guilty of slight negligence only. As before said, the rule of comparative degrees of negligence does not prevail in this state, and it is immaterial what the extent of the injured party’s negligence may have been, if it contributed in any degree as the proximate cause of the injury, there can be no recovery.” — D. & R. G. R. R. Co. v. Spencer, 25 Colo., 9-12, 52 Pac., 211.
It will be noticed that the objection in the case above cited was to the court attempting to limit the negligence to “slight negligence only.”
In C. & S. Ry. Co. v. Webb, 36 Colo., 224-230, 85 Pac., 682, the supreme court upheld the refusal of a tendered instruction informing the jury that “unless the evidence showed that the defendant had been guilty of gross negligence, in no event could the plaintiff recover, ’ ’ because it said:
“Degrees of negligence, such as slight and gross, does not prevail in this jurisdiction. ’ ’
“If * * * the deceased was also guilty of an equal or nearly equal degree of negligence * * then the jury should find for the defendant.”
The other authorities from this state cited by counsel involve the same question of comparative degrees of negligence, which, in our opinion, has no application to the case before us.
We feel that substantial justice was administered in the trial court without reversible error, hence the judgment should be and it is hereby affirmed.