54 Colo. 371 | Colo. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court:
This cause was in this court before and the former opinion is reported in 43 Colo. 58. The facts relative to the accident, in which the wife of the plaintiff in error received injuries which caused her death, are substantially the same in this record as narrated in the former opinion.
Mrs. Liutz, a young and vigorous woman, started diagonally across Larimer street, in Denver, near its intersection with Twenty-fifth street, obviously intending to board an approaching car at the' usual place on the opposite side of Twenty-fifth street.' ' She was carrying a small child in her arms, and as she proceeded she signalled the car. A gong was sounded. She stepped upon the track -immediately in front of the car; was struck by the fender or rail guard, which projected forward from the front of the car over the rails, fell upon it, struggled an instant and then fell from the fender on the right side in the space between the fender and the front wheel. She stepped upon the track at about the middle of Twenty-fifth street. The car was running slowly, evidently slowing up to make the stop on the opposite side, for there was evidence that the brake had been applied. There was nothing in the situation to indicate to the motorman that she was about to attempt to cross the track before the car had passed her. . Her signals indicated that she knew the car was approaching, and the gong reminded her of that fact. The .car was moving at a lawful rate óf speed. The brakes were in good order. One witness testified that the car was five or six feet from her -when she stepped upon the track, and another that it was not more than seven or eight feet away. The motorman testified that he was not more than six feet •from her. These witnesses evidently estimated the distance with reference to the body of the car. . Another testified that the projecting fender was not more than fifteen inches from
There were two causes of action in the complaint. The first was based upon negligence in operating- the car, in not stopping it in time to prevent the injury, and in, not dropping the fender so as to- prevent the body of Mrs. Diutz from getting under the car. The second cause of action alleged the same things except with reference to the fender, and further alleged that the injury was inflicted by negligently backing the car after it had stopped. The lower court directed a verdict for the defendant company on the first cause of action, and submitted to the jury the second cause of action with reference to the backing of the car, and the jury returned a verdict for the defendant company. It is contended that the court erred in directing a verdict for defendant on the first cause of action. In the former opinion it was held that up to the time the car stopped the company was not guilty of any negligence and that the injury to Mrs. Diutz by the forward mo
Upon reading the record now before us, we are not inclined to change the view of the matter heretofore announced, and the reasons are so fully discussed in the former opinion that it is unnecessary to discuss them here. Upon, reading the whole record, it appears clear .that only one conclusion can be drawn from the evidence, and that is, that any injury which was inflicted upon Mrs. Liutz by the forward motion of the car was due solely to her own act in stepping upon the track so immediately in front of the car that it was impossible to prevent injury to her, and that the motorman did all that in reason could have been expected of him. It is contended that even though Mrs. Liutz was negligent in' stepping upon the track, the evidence showed that the front end of "the fender was about a foot above the rails and if the motorman would have dropped it, as he might have done, she would not have gotten under the car, or at least there was a chance for the jury to say she would not. Many authorities are cited to the effect that notwithstanding the negligence of a plaintiff, if the defendant observed or should have observed such negligence in time to avert injurious consequences by the exercise of reasonable care, it is the duty of the defendant to exercise such care. That is commonly called the doctrine of last clear chance. This can be answered in two ways. It clearly appears from the evidence of all the witnesses who testified with any knowledge of how Mrs. Liutz fell from the fender that she did not fall from it in front so that it would pass over her, but that she fell off at the side in the space between the fender and the front wheel. Under these circumstances it is unlikely that the dropping of the front end of the fender would have availed anything.
If we are wrong in this it nevertheless is plain that in order to apply the doctrine mentioned to a state of facts the circumstances must be such as to present a last clear chance to avert injury by the exercise of reasonable care. In this
As has been, said, the contention that the fatal injuries were caused by negligently backing the car was submitted to the jury. Complaint is made of several of the instructions given at the request of the defendant. In each of them the jury were told that if they found a certain state of facts the verdict should be for defendant. There was some repetition in the instructions, but it cannot be said that any one was the counterpart of the other. It is claimed that, what repetition there was tended to- confuse the jury, and that the -frequent use of the phrase “verdict for defendant” gave undue prominence to the idea that the jury should so find. -Each instruction was clear enough in itself and no claim is made that any of them incorrectly stated the law or recited facts not deducible from the evidence. Many authorities are cited showing that repetition in the instructions is to be avoided. AH of them, however, save one, are to the effect that it is not error to refuse a correct instruction when the charge already contains the same thing expressly or substantially.- This is undoubtedly good law, but that is far from saying that repetition is reversible error. In the one case of State v. Legg, 59 W. Va., 315, the'court condemned the practice of repetition in instructions, but refused to say whether it was reversible error or not, and did not intimate what it would do in that behalf were it necessary. O’f course unnecessary repetition in the charge is to be condemned, but that is not saying that it must be regarded as reversible error. It might become so if it tended to confuse the jury. In the present case, however, the instructions, even with the repetition they may have contained, cleared confusion rather than produced it. The conflicting claims of plaintiff were likely to produce confusion. It was first contended that the fatal-injury was inflicted by the car before it stopped in its forward motion, and next that
In the motion for a new trial it was alleged:
1. That the Tramway Company made it a practice to keep two men about the court house to mingle with prospective jurors, talk with them particularly with reference to Tramway cases, and by flattery, ridicule and other insidious means endeavor to improperly influence them so' that verdicts might be returned for the company.
2. That one of the jurors in this case had been informed that if a verdict was not reached before bed-time the jury would be compelled to sleep over night in beds infected with vermin, and that rather than sleep in such a bed the juror, against his will, agreed to the verdict for the defendant.
When these charges were brought to the attention of the court, an investigation was ordered and plaintiff was directed to produce his evidence. A hearing was had, much testimony was taken, and the court found that the charges were not sustained and overruled the motion for a new trial. Unless the finding of the court was manifestly against the weight of the testimony, or its discretion was abused, we can not disturb this finding. It is enough to say that in the cold record before us there does not appear sufficient evidence to sustain the charges. The district judge saw the witnesses- on the stand, observed their demeanor, interrogated many of them himself, and was much more competent to judge of their testimony than an appellate court. If the first charge were true, that the Tramway Company made it a practice to influence jurors as alleged, such a practice is to be condemned in the severest terms. The district court, in such a case, has it within its power to severely punish any who may resort to such an evil practice, and should not hesitate to employ drastic measures to stamp it out. It is the duty of attorneys of the court, who are aware of such conditions and have evidence thereof, to co-operate with the court in bringing offenders to punishment and in putting a stop to such a condition of corruption. Verdicts influenced thereby should unhesitatingly be set. aside. However, before anything can be done sufficient evidence must be produced. Men cannot be punished or verdicts set aside for such a reason' upon mere suspicion and without evidence. If there is any evidence at all in this record of such a practice it is very meager indeed, and there is no evidence -whatever that the jurors in the present case ever heard of it or were in any manner influenced in their present verdict thereby. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears, uncontradicted, that the jury was free from such an influence. An affidavit of the juror, who claimed that his verdict
The facts with reference, to the treating of jurors with cigars appears to- be as follows: The jury agreed on their verdict in the evening, sealed it and dispersed to their homes. The next morning they returned the verdict into court. It was received and they were dismissed. After this, in going-down the elevator to the lower floor of1 the court house, defendant’s attorney and some of the jurors were together.
“That customary offices of civility, and ordinary hospitality or courtesy, extended by the successful litigant, when not designed or calculated to influence the juror or jurors in their consideration of the case, and which are devoid of suspicion, will not afford sufficient ground for setting the verdict aside and awarding a new trial.”
And in Gale agt. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 53 Howard’s Prac. 385, it is said:
“When, however, the court is satisfied that there has been no attempt by the successful party to unduly influence a juror, either by conversation or by placing him under obligations, and that his action has not in fact been improperly influenced, then, even though the act may have been indiscreet, the court will not disturb the verdict.”
These utterances of the courts and others of like character are quoted and the principles therein announced followed in the case of Mo. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Bowman, 75 Pac. 482 (Kans.). There is an entire absence of any indication that the attorney for the defendant treated the jurors to cigars, in any other spirit than one of civility, hospitality and courtesy that came to him on the spur of the moment after the verdict,
Judgment affirmed.