105 Tenn. 654 | Tenn. | 1900
Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the Court below for the sum of $7,500 for the negligent killing of his intestate. .The company appealed, and has 'assigned errors.
The first assignment of error we shall consider is that the Court erred in admitting the written testimony embodied in the demurrer to the evidence. It is necessary to explain that on the original trial of this cause in the Circuit Court a demurrer to the evidence interposed by defendant-company was sustained by the Court, and plaintiff’s suit dismissed. On appeal this Court at last term reversed the action of the trial Judge, and remanded the cause for assessment of damages by another jury. It was stated in the entry made at last term reversing the judgment, that the cause' was remanded for the assessment of damages upon the evidence set out in the demurrer. This was. accordingly done, and, as already stated, the jury assessed the damages at $7,500. It is now objected that the Court below permitted the evidence embodied in the original demurrer to be-read to the jury, excluding all other testimony. Counsel for defendant company objected to the-reading of the transcript of the evidence incor
It is argued that the jury called to assess the-damages should have an opportunity to see the-witnesses in order . to weigh the testimony, but. since the testimony by the demurrer has been admitted to be true, there can be no occasion for-the jury to see the witnesses. The transcript of' the original evidence is the recorded admission of' the defendant, and is not only admissible, but tire-best evidence that can be produced. Again, it is-argued that the original witnesses should again be-examined orally, in order that defendant’s counsel may have the right of cross-examination. But this, right was exeerised, - or might have been exercised, on the original hearing. It is argued that the-demurrer to the evidence only goes to the ques
The nest assignment of error is that the jury were sworn to well and truly try the issues joined between the parties, and were not sworn to well and truly assess the damages.
It suffices to say, in answer to this objection, that defendant’s counsel were present when the jury was sworn, and made no objection to the form of oath administered. Looper v. Bell, 1 Head, 376. The rule is that in such cases a party may not sit quietly by and take his
Moreover, we do not • perceive why the assessment of damages was not an issue — certainly it was in respect to the quantum of damages — the plaintiff being, of course entitled, as matter of law, to nominal damages upon the overruling of the demurrer. It is next assigned as error that the verdict of the jury was excessive. The plaintiff’s intestate was , a boy seventeen years of age, engaged in running a lathe in defendant’s factory. In attempting to adjust the belt which ran his machine, on the pulley overhead, the ladder upon which he was standing, owing to a defective standard, gave way, and the young man was caught in the revolving machinery and wound around the shaft, the belt confining him to the revolving shaft until the machinery was stopped, and he was released by backing the machinery and unwinding the belt which fastened him to the shaft. His arms and legs were broken, and he sustained such internal injuries that, as the result thereof, he died in a few days. At the last term of this Court, overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, this Court held that upon the evidence submitted, a jury would have been justified in finding that the ladder broke from the mere weight of the boy and because of the defect
Affirmed.