89 Kan. 289 | Kan. | 1913
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Manuel S. McIntosh, a teamster in the employ of the Standard Oil Company, was engaged in hauling oil with a wagon drawn by three mules. While he was filling the tank on his wagon from, a standpipe in the storage yard, the team ran away. McIntosh was injured. He sued the company, alleging that the runaway was caused by an empty barrel being negligently loosened from a rick and permitted to roll toward and close to the mules. He recovered a judgment from which the defendant appeals.
The answer alleged in general terms that the plaintiff’s own carelessness contributed to his injuries, without specifying the acts or omissions relied upon as constituting such contributory negligence. No motion was made to make the allegations in this regard more defi- I nite. The defendant offered evidence for the purpose of proving that at the time of the injury the plaintiff was intoxicated. The offer was refused, and complaint! is made of that ruling. Upon the issue whether at a [ particular time a person was exercising due care fori his own safety, evidence that he was under the influence! of liquor is clearly admissible, not as conclusively es-l
The statute requires that where the ground óf a motion for a new trial is error in the exclusion of evidence, such evidence shall be produced at the hearing of the motion. (Civ. Code, § 307.) The abstract does not show that at the hearing of the motion for a new trial in this case any evidence was produced that the plaintiff was in fact intoxicated when he received his injury. This omission prevents a reversal upon the ground of the exclusion of the testimony of the witness
The plaintiff was permitted to rely upon evidence that the mules were frightened by the noise made by the rolling of several barrels, instead of by a barrel coming toward and near to them, as alleged in the petition, and an amendment to meet this situation was allowed after the verdict was returned. These rulings are complained of. They seem to have been well within the discretionary power of the court, and as the question can not arise at a new trial it is not now important. Complaint is also made of an instruction that the defendant was bound to exercise ordinary care to provide for the plaintiff a safe place in which to work,
Upon the ground indicated the judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) : I do not concur in the interpretation given to section 307 of the civil code. To entitle a party to a new trial of a cause or to a review of a decision excluding evidence or denying a fair opportunity to produce evidence at the trial the evidence sought to be shown must be produced on the motion for a new trial. This requirement is in plain English and applies to “all cases.” No exception is made where the evidence excluded is sought to be obtained on cross-examination, nor where a party to the case is the witness whose testimony is sought. The testimony of a party to the case may be obtained and he may be subjected to a cross-examination the same as any other witness, and the testimony proposed to be obtained from him can be shown on the motion for a new trial without difficulty. There is no exception of that kind in the statute, and, furthermore, I can see no reason why such -an exception should be made. The restriction of the cross-examination of a party or other witness is only a denial of a fair opportunity to produce