Missоuri Pacific Railroad Company (the Railroad) appeals the judgment of the district court denying it court costs and indemnity in the amount of $76,000.00 from Tilmon A. Adams. We affirm.
The Railroad brought this diversity suit in the Eastern District of Arkаnsas (The Honorable Elsijane T. Roy, District Judge, presiding) to recover $80,000.00 it had paid in settlement 1 to James West, a conductor on one of its trains, who was injured when the train came to an emergency stop to avoid hitting a truck owned by Star City Gravel Company and driven by its agent, Tilmon Adams. Adams had stalled the truck on the railroad tracks. The Railroad sought indemnity, or, in the alternative, contribution from Star City and Adams, alleging that Adams’ negligence in stalling the truck was the proximate cause of West’s injuries.
The case was submitted to a jury on special interrogatories which asked for apportionment of thе relative fault for the accident among the parties as required by the Arkansas comparative fault statute, Ark.Stat.Ann. §§ 27-1763
et seq.
(Supp. 1975). No interrogatories or instructions relative to the Railroad’s indemnity claim were requested or given. The jury returned a verdict finding Star City and Adams responsible for only five per cent of the total negligence which proximately caused West’s injuries. The Railroad, on the оther hand, was deemed ninety-five per cent at fault. Because of this verdict, the district court at first dismissed the Railroad’s complaint after concluding the comparative fault statute barred rеcovery by any joint tortfeasor found fifty per cent or more at fault. The Railroad subsequently filed a motion to amend this judgment, seeking court costs, contribution in the amount of $4,000.00
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from Star City and Adams, jointly and sеverally, and indemnity for the remaining $76,000.00 of the settlement figure from Adams alone. This motion was granted by the district court as to the claim for contribution. On reconsideration it determined the Railroad had established a proper claim for contribution under Arkansas’ version of the Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Act, Ark.Stat.Ann. §§ 34-1001
et seq.,
which provides that the relative degrees of fault of joint tortfeasors may be cоnsidered in determining their rights to contribution.
See Wheaton Van Lines, Inc. v. Williams,
We have some difficulty, however, with the district court’s treatment of the Railroad’s second theory of indеmnity recovery. The Railroad’s briefs and pleadings contain general allegations that it is entitled to indemnity because the actions of its agents were “passive” in that the agents merely failed tо timely discover and avoid the dangerous situation created by Adams’ “active” negligence in stalling his truck on the railroad tracks. This theory finds support in the caselaw. As Dean Prosser has noted, “there is . considerable language in the eases to the effect that one whose negligence has consisted of mere passive neglect may have indemnity from an active wrongdoer.” Prosser,
supra,
§ 52.
See also Miller v. Pa. Ry. Co.,
It is unclear whether Arkansas would allow common law indemnity under this theory; but the district court, apparently acting under the assumption that it might,
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rejected the Railroad’s claim on the merits. The court notеd there was evidence in the record indicating the Railroad had negligently failed to maintain its right of way free from visual obstructions and that the jury could have considered this evidence in its assignment of fаult. This led it to determine that “[b]y the employment of the term ‘proximate cause’ in the interrogatories, and the answers entered thereto, it is reasonable to conclude that the jury determined thаt both plaintiffs and defendants were actively at fault.” We think this conclusion was unduly speculative and is unsupported by the jury’s verdict. While it is true the jury assigned ninety-five per cent of the total fault or negligence to the Railroad, this assignment did not speak to the distinct issue of whether the negligent acts
This is not to say that the district cоurt’s erroneous assumption entitles the Railroad to a new trial on this issue as a matter of right. It was the responsibility of the Railroad to establish the character of its agent’s negligence as a рart of its indemnity cause of action. As a Missouri appellate court has stated,
[a]s an essential element of his case it is incumbent upon the indemnitee to plead and prove that his nеgligence towards the injured party was only secondary and passive, and that of the indemnitor active and primary ... It was necessary for the jury to find that plaintiffs [in the indemnity suit] were guilty of negligence. Otherwise, plaintiffs would not have been warranted in making a settlement with the [injured party]. But the jury was further required to find that such negligence was passive and that the defendant was guilty of active negligence.
W.
Cas. & Surety Co. v. Shell Oil Co.,
Here the Railroad failed to request any instructions or special interrogatories on indemnity. Nor did it otherwise alert the district court to the need for proper instructions.
See, e. g., Dulin v. Circule F. Industries,
This erroneous omission on the part of the Railroad brings into play Fed.R. Civ.P. 51 which provides:
No party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless he objects thereto before the jury retires to сonsider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection. (Emphasis added.)
We have repeatedly stated that the purpose of Rule 51 is to compel litigants to afford the trial court an opportunity to cure an defective instruction and to prevent litigants from ensuring a new trial in the event of an adverse verdict by covertly relying on the error.
Fulton v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R.R.,
Where, as here, the plaintiff simply fails to request an instruction on a necessary element of his cause of action and does not demonstrate plain error on the trial cоurt’s part in failing sua sponte to formulate and give an appropriate instruction, we can only conclude that he has waived any further resolution of the issue. Thus, we affirm the district court’s decision that the Railroad is entitled only to contribution.
As to the issue of court costs, the district court, contrary to the Railroad’s assertions, clearly expressed its intention to disallow the Railroad’s request for costs in its June 13, 1978 order. While costs are normally awarded to the prevailing party, such an award is within the sound discretion of the trial court, and a refusal to award costs can only be overturned upon a finding thаt the district court abused its
Affirmed.
Notes
. West submitted his claim for damages against the Railroad pursuant to the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51 et seq. The Railroad voluntarily settled this claim and obtained from West a release from liability for all parties to this suit.
. This $4,000.00 figure was calculated by charging Star City and Adams for five per cent of the $80,000.00 settlement — an amount proportionate to the fault attributable to their actions under the jury’s verdict.
. The district court, although addressing the Railroad’s common law indemnity claims on the merits, determined as an аlternative ground for its decision that Arkansas would reject common law indemnity in favor of a universal application of its contribution and comparative fault statutes. Early decisions of the fеderal district courts in Arkansas assumed the Arkansas Supreme Court would allow common law indemnity in a negligence action, see, e.
g., Transport Ins. Co. v. Manufacturers Cas. Ins. Co.,
