47 Neb. 686 | Neb. | 1896
The defendant in error brought this action against the plaintiff in error to recover on account of injuries sustained by defendant in error in operating machinery while in the employ of the plaintiff in error, a laundryman. She recovered judgment for $2,500. For convenience the parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant as their positions were in the district court. The petition, after alleging that the defendant was the' owner of and operated a laundry in Omaha, and that the plaintiff was his servant in the operation thereof, alleged that there was in the laundry a certain machine called a mangle, which was on June 27, 1890, incomplete, imperfect, unsafe, and wholly unfit for use in that it had no guard or protection for the fingers or hands at the point where the clothes were received into the machine; that the defendant well knew of the defect in the machine but negligently used and operated said machine and directed the plaintiff to operate the same; that on said 27th of June, while plaintiff was using said machiné as directed by the defendant, she had three fingers of her left hand cut and bruised by said machine so that amputation was necessary; “that said in
At this point in plaintiff’s testimony, the following occurred:
You may state whether or not he [the defendant] said anything to you in regard to using the mangle?
A. Yes, the first day we was using the mangle he said, “We will get that guard as soon as we can.”
Mr. Breen: What is that answer?
A. He will get that guard as soon as he can get it. •
The overruling of this motion is assigned as error. In considering this assignment the question first arises whether, under the circumstances, the question having been answered without objection, the overruling of a motion to strike out the testimony is open to review. It has been several times held that where a question is answered without objection, objections to the evidence are waived and cannot thereafter be presented by a motion to strike out the evidence so admitted. (Palmer v. Witcherly, 15 Neb., 98; Oberfelder v. Kavanaugh, 29 Neb., 427; Western Home Ins. Co. v. Richardson, 40 Neb., 1; Brown v. Cleveland, 44 Neb., 239.) In all of these cases, however, it either affirmatively appears from the report, or it is a fair presumption from the facts stated, that the questions.which elicited the objectionable evidence were of such a character that objections interposed thereto before the questions were answered would have prevented the admission of the evidence. Where the objectionable matter appears in an answer not properly responsive to a question, the rule must be different. This distinction was indicated in Gran v. Houston, 45 Neb., 813. In Kissinger v. Staley, 44 Neb., 783, it was held that if the evi dence was recited in a narrative form or volunteered by the witness, or if it was not responsive to a question asked, a motion to strike out must be made in order to present anything for review. The reason is that where the evidence is given
Reversed and remanded.