23 Colo. App. 357 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1913
Appellee recovered a judgment for $2,000 on the verdict of a jury against the appellant in the districl court of Otero county for injuries sustained on account of driving his automobile into a barbed wire fence that was built by the appellant across what the appellee states in his complaint to be a public highway.
Fifty-six assignments of error are discussed by the appellant under four general divisions, which will be considered in the'order presented.
1. Appellee was permitted to amend his complaint by inserting the words “wantonly, wilfully, recklessly and intentionally,” thus making that part of it, when so amended, read as follows:
“The defendant, through its agents, .servants and employes, wrongfully, wantonly, wilfully, recklessly, intentionally and negligently built, and caused to be built, an obstruction across and upon a certain public highway. ’ ’
This amendment was permissible under sec. 75, Mills’ Ann. Code (Code, sec. 81, Eev. Stat. 1908), as it appears from the record that notice was given and a sufficient cause shown to satisfy the- discretion of the trial court, and such amendment did not necessarily state an entirely different and new cause of action. However, if such amendment be construed, as the lower court seems to have construed it, to change the cause of action so'as to make it one for intentional injury, such as would prevent any defense on the ground of contributory negligence, and thus make the cause of action one based entirely upon the wilful and intentional acts of defendant, without reference to acts of pure negligence, then such amendment should be made as an additional cause of action, in order that the defendant might not be deprived of its right to plead contributory negligence as a defense
It is sufficient to say that it was reversible error for the lower court to try the case upon both theories of the complaint, and then, to take the question of contributory negligence, by its instructions, from the consideration of the jury,.or fail to instruct them that contributory negligence would be a defense if they should find that the acts of the defendant were not wanton, wilful, reckless and intentional.
2. The next contention is that, as the plaintiff alleged in his complaint, “that said highway * * * has for many years been a duly laid out and open public highway dedicated to and used by the public as such for the purposes of travel, that said obstruction consisted of a fence built of four barbed wires nailed to posts securely set in the ground directly and transversely across said highway from side to side;” he should prove such fact as alleged, and that he failed to do so, and therefore
Furthermore, where an action is for damages resulting from an obstruction of a public highway alleged to be duly laid out and used as such, and the answer is a general denial only, the plaintiff is required to prove only such facts- as show that the commissioners had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties to the proceeding; but when he introduces the entire record in proof of such allegation in his complaint, as an instrument of evidence and as a basis of recovery, the defendant may attack such proof as being insufficient in,the premises, although such attack be collateral.—Thatcher v. Crisman, 6 Colo. App., 49, 54; Van Fleet on Collateral Attack, ch. 1, sec. 12 et seq. Nevertheless, when .jurisdiction is once shown, the courts will construe further proceedings with liberality, and a substantial compliance with the statute in such cases will be held sufficient.—Howard v. Dakotah Co., 25 Nebr., 229, 41 N. W., 185; State v. Smith, 100 N. C., 550, 6 S. E., 251; Thatcher v. Crisman, supra. However, an inspection of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff makes it very doubtful that there was a substantial compliance with the statute,, sufficient to give the board of county commissioners in this instance jurisdiction, and construing the further pro
The complaint states a cause of action against the wrongful obstruction of a public highway, and the court in its instructions followed this theory of the complaint. ■ And while the court, by its remarks at the trial, indicated that it made no difference whether it was a public highway or not, as the plaintiff could recover as a licensee, such remarks were not warranted by the allegations of the complaint, nor remembered in the instructions, and no amendment of the complaint was requested or made in compliance with such theory. All evidence admitted tending to prove long user of the road by the public as licensees should have been excluded, unless the complaint had been amended in accordance with such testimony. If the action had been tried on this theory, by counsel on both sides, and the court had so instructed the jury, it could be held that no amendment was required.
3. It is extremely doubtful if the facts of this case could ever be brought within the rule that excludes the defense of contributory negligence of the party injured, in causes based upon the wilful and intentional acts of the injuring party; however, the jury should have been instructed in plain and specific terms that they should consider the defense of contributory .negligence in case they should find that the acts of the defendant were not
It was not prejudicial error to try the case with both simple and wilful negligence relied upon as stated in the complaint, if the court had not practically taken from the jury all consideration of the issue of contributory negligence, and while all the members of this court are not in entire accord as to whether such consideration was wholly withdrawn from the jury, all concur in the conclusion that the defendant was entitled to a more definite and specific submission thereof.
It must be true, as discussed in the first paragraph of this opinion, that if the issue of contributory negligence be wholly withdrawn from the jury, then the plaintiff must recover wholly upon the issue of wilfulness, or wantonness, or acts showing a reckless disregard of the rights of others, and, under such issue, the question of simple negligence of defendant as an issue should be eliminated, except as it may be used in the instructions given to better understand them. But if both issues be submitted, then an instruction- must be given clearly submitting and defining contributory negligence to meet the contingency, if the jury should find no wilfulness, wantonness, or reckless disregard of- the rights of others.
4. Upon another trial, the testimony of the witnesses as to how long the road had been traveled and whether it was a regular public thoroughfare, and as to the taking down and reconstruction of the fence, if offered, may be confined within the issues as they may be joined, and admitted or excluded under proper instruc
Reversed and Remanded.