McLean v. Burbank

12 Minn. 530 | Minn. | 1867

JBy the Oourt

Berry, J.

In this action an appeal was once before taken to this Oourt, and the case is reported in 11 Mmnn 277. In accordance with the decision there found, a new trial was had below, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. Thereupon a motion was made for a new trial, from the order denying which the defendants have taken the present appeal.

It will be unnecessary to recapitulate the facts developed on the" trial, as they are substantially the same as are reported in the volume above cited.

I. The counsel for the appellants urges first, that the Court' below “ erred in refusing a continuance for an absent witness.” The affidavit used in support of the motion for the continuance reads as follows :

“John L. Merriam being duly sworn says, that he is one of the defendants in the above entitled action; that William Roe is a material witness on behalf of defendants, without whose testimony defendants cannot safely go to trial; that deponent believes said witness, if present and examined in court, would testify as follows, to wit:

I was in the employ of Burbank & Co. in March, 1863; was present when the accident occurred when McLean lost his life; had been in employ of Burbank & Co. little over a year; have been a driver over seven years last November. *532That has been my business; my route at that time was from Hastings to Saint Paul; we started down from the house, (Mr. White and me;) Mr. White then told me to stop and he would show me the way; there were several large stones in the way; I then drove down to the boat and stopped, and the ferryman told me to come on; when the fore wheels struck the boat it gave way a little, and when the hind wheels struck it, it pushed off from the [shore, and when it got into deep water it uncoupled. I could see perfectly well to drive on; the horses did not back ; I kept the horses up, thinking that it would hold the coach; I then saw the ferryman take hold of one of the horses and back him a little, so as not to crowd the leaders ; I felt the coupling give way, and threw my lines over the wheel horses, and I went into the water with the body of the coach. The upper rope around the rock gave way; I swam in the water and heard men struggling; I tried to get hold of the door knob and couldn’t; I caught hold of one gentleman and pulled him on to the coach; then another came out, and I had hold of one gentleman and held on” to him, and in doing so turned over the coach; I then got Mm out, and he then got on the top of the coach; I then struck for the shore. The ferry boat then came down ; I asked the ferryman to cut the rope and come down to help me; he was excited, I suppose, and did not answer; I think if he had cut the rope at that time it would have swung round near the coach; the ferryman was on the boat alone; the boy was on the shore; when I drove down I stopped about thirty yards from the ferry, and Mr. "White got off and went ahead, and I stopped again until I was told to go on by the ferryman.” The balance of the affidavit relates to the efforts made to procure the attendance of the witness, and to the inability of the defendants to prove the facts above stated by any other person.

*533The court below held that the affidavit showed sufficient diligence in endeavoring to procure the attendance of Roe, but that the testimony which it was claimed that he would give was not material, and on this ground the continuance was refused.

The appellants insist that they “are not liable in any event, unless the act or omission complained of was wrongful / and this testimony bore directly upon -that issue, to wit, whether the act or omission complained of was or was not wrongful.” Sec. 3, Chap. 68, Pub. Stat., under which this action is brought provides that, “when the death of one is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another, the personal representatives of' the former may maintain an action against the latter, if the former might have maintained an action, had he lived, against the latter, for an injury caused by the same act or omission.” The natural construction of this language would appear to be, that the representatives may maintain their action for the same kind of act or omission, causing death, for which the intestate might have maintained an action had the resulting injury fallen short of death.

In the case at bar, any act or omission violative of the obligations which the appellants, as common carriers of passengers, assumed towards ihe intestate, would be a wrongful act or omission within the meaning of the statute. The word wrongful is not used in the sense of wilful or malicious. Now-in the order of the trial, the testimony of Roe, had he been called as a witness by the defendants, would have been introduced after the plaintiff had closed her .case. It appears that at the outs'et of the trial, the defendants admitted that the plaintiff was duly authorized and qualified to bring this action, that the defendants were partners as J. C. Burbank & Co., and that the plaintiff’s intestate bought and paid for a ticket from Reed’s Landing to St. Paul at the time stated in the *534complaint. By reference to the testimony, it will be seen that at the close of the plaintiff’s case, it appeared that the defendants were carriers of passengers, that the plaintiff’s intestate took passage on defendants’ stage from Need’s Landing to St. Paul, that at Hastings on the way to St. Paul, while .the coach was being driven upon the ferry boat which crosses the Mississippi river at that point, as the hind wheels struck the boat, it swung out from the shore, the body of the coach was uncoupled from the fore wheels and was precipitated into the river, and that the intestate, being at the time inside the coach, was drowned.

It further appeared that the ferry at which the accident occurred was on and constituted part of the route taken by the defendants in this instance, that there was another route from Hastings to St. Paul not by this ferry, that the contract between the defendants and the intestate was for the entire route from one terminus to the other, that there was no notice of the intervention of any other carrier than the defendants.

At the close of the defendants’ testimony, including the testimony proposed in the affidavit for the continuance, nothing would have appeared to the contrary. Nor would it have appeared from any quarter, that notice was given to the intestate that the passage of the river was attended with more than ordinary danger, or that it required special care or caution on the part of passengers. In 11 Minn. 288, in reference to this action, this Court made use of the following language : “The law imposes npon the common carrier of passengers, the greatest care and foresight for the safety of his passengers, and holds him liable for the slightest neglect. This duty and responsibility exist, not only in respect to the vehicle, but to every means and instrument used or embraced by the carrier in the transportation, and extends throughout the entire journey. This embraces the duty of giving *535notice to tbe passengers, of places in tbe road, tbe passage of wbicb is attended with more than ordinary- danger, or requires special care or caution on the part of passengers, and tbe neglect of tbe carrier to give tbe notice, will render him bable in case of injury. ” We further beld on page 291, that under tbe state of facts above referred to, “as to’tbe passengers, tbe ferry company are tbe employees and agents of tbe defendants, and tbe latter are responsible for tbe acts of tbe ferryman or ferry company, as for any other of their employees or agents. ” And on page 287, we further beld, that under tbe circumstances of this case as developed on tbe trial, “ proof that tbe plaintiff’s intestate was a passenger of tbe defendants, and that tbe accident occasioned tbe death, devolves upon tbe defendants tbe burden of exonerating themselves, by proof of diligence. ” Now in view of tbe evidence wbicb we have recapitulated, and of tbe law as we lay it down, what is there in tbe proposed testimony of Roe, as disclosed in tbe affidavit of Merriam, that tends “ to exonerate ” tbe defendants “by proof oí diligence? ” "What is there that tends to excuse tbe swinging off of tbe boat, the precipitation of tbe coach into tbe river, and tbe drowning of tbe intestate ? What is there that tends to show that tbe act or omission wbicb produced this fatal result was not wrongful ?

The care exercised in driving before the boat was reached, or tbe truly heroic exertions of tbe driver to save tbe lives of tbe passengers after tbe precipitation into tbe water, are certainly for these purposes ineffectual. Equally so is that portion of tbe testimony of Roe in wbicb the acts and omissions of tbe ferryman are spoken of, because tbe.defendants were liable for bis conduct, as for that of tbe driver himself. There is nothing tending to show that tbe death was caused by the wilful act of any employee of tbe defendants, acting out of tbe course of bis employment, nor by any third person for whose *536acts the defendants were not responsible, nor by any uncontrollable physical force which the defendants could not be exL pected to foresee or provide against. We think that the Judge below was right in holding the proposed evidence immaterial, and that the continuance was properly refused on that ground. "We think further that an examination of all the testimony in the case will show that there was no dispute as to the facts in regard to which Eoe was expected to testify, and that there was nothing substantial in the proposed testimony which did not come from some other witness uncontradicted.

Indeed we are of opinion that the testimony of Eoe was valuable only to the plaintiff. The counsel for defendants urges that to hold the testimony of Eoe immaterial, is to hold all the testimony introduced by them immaterial. This would seem to be the precise estimate placed upon it by the jury.

II. The case shows that the counsel for the defendants requested the Court to instruct the jury, that in addition to rendering a general verdict, they should find upon certain questions of fact which were specified. To the refusal of the Court to comply with this request, exception was taken and this refusal is the second error assigned.by the defendants. Sec. 218, page 480, Gen. Stat., provides, that the Court “ in all cases may instruct them (the jury), if they render a general verdict, to find upon particular questions of fact to be stated in writing, and may direct a written finding thereon. ” The counsel for the defendants submit that this provision of statute confers the power, not the discretion, on the Court so to instruct the jury. ” We think otherwise. By the terms of the statute the power so to instruct the jury is intrusted to the discretion of the District Court, and, as in other cases, the exercise of such discretion will not be disturbed here, unless it is manifest that injustice has resulted from an abuse of discretion.

*537We perceive nothing of the kind in this case, nor are we able to see what possible advantage the defendants conld have derived from answers to the particular questions proposed, in connection with a general verdict.

The appellants further contend, that “the Court erred in refusing certain instructions asked by defendants, and in giving certain instructions asked by the plaintiff. ” The counsel for the appellants, conceding that the refusals and instructions were in accordance with the views expressed by this Court when this case was before us on a former occasion, and reported in 11 Minn. 277, proposed to reargue the questions there decided, but we declined to hear him, adhering to the doctrines then announced.

As a fourth and last error, the appellants insist that the instructions are “ erroneous in view of the pleadings. The complaint expressly charges that the act which caused the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, was the act of the defendants, and their agents and servants who had the charge and control of said coach. * * * Under an issue thus made, it is insisted, that even if the ferryman be regarded as the servant or agent of the defendants, the latter cannot be held liable for his acts or omissions in the premises. ” The complaint alleges that “said defendants, and their said agents and servants who had the charge and control of said coach, of their own gross carelessness, negligence and misconduct, * * drove and allowed said coach to be driven out of the highway and usual road, and suffered the same, through like gross negligence and want of care, to run into and become submerged in the Mississippi Elver. ” The words which we italicise are, we think, sufficient to include the ferry company, and the ferryman, and their acts and omissions. Under the facts of this case as remarked in our former opinion on page 291, 11 Minn., “ as to the passen*538gers, tbe ferry company are tbe employees and agents of tbe defendants, and tbe latter are responsible for tbe acts of tbe ferryman and ferry company, as for any other of their employees or agents.” Tbe ferryman whose duty it was to transport tbe coach safely across tbe river, who as appears on all bands directed tbe driver to drive on tbe boat, and who took bold of tbe horses, must certainly be regarded as having, to some extent at least, “the charge and control of tbe coach. ”

This disposes of all the points made by the appellants, and tbe result is that the order appealed from is affirmed.

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