69 S.W.2d 1017 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1934
Affirming.
Lawrence Lenehan sued the Louisville Railway Company for $10,075 for injuries alleged to have been sustained by him through its negligence; he recovered $3,000, and it has appealed.
W.S. Russell sued it for $2,575, the jury found for it, and Russell has appealed. These cases grew out of the same accident, they were heard together in the trial court and in this court, and will be disposed of in one opinion.
"The decided weight of authority is to the effect that the giving of erroneous instructions will be presumed to be prejudicial to appellant, and that the burden of proof rests on appellee to show affirmatively from the record that no prejudice resulted, and when an appellate court cannot determine from the record that a verdict was not probably influenced by an erroneous charge, the judgment will be reversed."
We regard that as a correct statement of the law, but in this case, as we interpret the record, it shows affirmatively the jury was not misled, for, under identical instructions, the same jury in the same trial, at the same time, and by the same foreman, returned a substantial verdict for Lenehan. Had the Russell case been tried separately, we would regard the error in this instruction as reversible, but, viewing it in connection with the Lenehan case, we feel that it has been demonstrated that the jury was not misled.
Both judgments are affirmed.
Dietzman, J., not sitting.