No. 21689 | Neb. | Oct 14, 1921

Dickson, District Judge.

This case was begun in the district court for Dodge county to recover damages. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant negligently and carelessly ran into and collided witli the coal wagon in which he was riding, thereby permanently injuring him. A tidal was had to a jury, which resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $6,000, upon which judgment- was entered, and defendant appeals to this court.

It appears that plaintiff was assisting his son in hauling coal to the electric light plant situated on the west-side of Main stieet in the city of Fremont, the son doing the hauling and unloading, and the father loading the wagons from the cars at the railroad track. Access to the light plant was by an alley running east and west and to the south and leading to and from Main street. After delivering the last load of coal, which ivas about midnight, the plaintiff and his son started for home, traveling the alley from the light plant to Main street, where they turned south along the west side. At this time the defendant was driving to the north on Main street in his automobile, and, at a point where the team and wagon was turned into Main street, the defendant’s car struck the tongue of the wagon, knocking down one or both horses, and throwing the plaintiff down in the wagon, injuring him.

Plaintiff predicates his cause of action upon a violation by defendant of certain ordinances of the city of Fremont, as well as the laws of the state. It is charged by plaintiff in his petition that the defendant negligently and carelessly, and in violation of the ordinances-and the laws of the state, drove his car along the west side of Main street at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and failed to keep a vigilant watch ahead for other vehicles *862which were entering upon the street, and failed to stop or attempt to stop or check the speed of his car in the shortest time and space possible when the defendant saw, or could by the exercise of ordinary care, have seen the team and wagon in time to stop his car and avoid the collision.

The ordinance referred to in the petition and offered in evidence .contains many provisions that are' not material in the, consideration of this case, and- only those that bear upon the issues, will be noticed. The ordinance provides that vehicles shall be driven in a careful manner, with due regard for the safety and convenience of other vehicles; that vehicles shall keep on the right of the center of the street; that vehicles meeting shall pass to the right; that drivers of motor vehicles shall have their cars under control; that no vehicle shall be operated at a greater rate of speed than is reasonable or proper, having* regard to the traffic and use of the highway, or so as to endanger the life and limb of any person, or in any event at a greater rate than ten miles an hour in the congested district, and outside of the congested district no car shall be operated at a greater speed than twelve miles an hour.

Many errors are assigned, but only those presented by the appellant’s brief will be considered. It is contended by the appellant in his brief that the court erred in giving instructions Nos. 1, 4, and 6, and in refusing to give instructions Nos. 1, 3, 4, and 5, requested by Mm; that the verdict of the jury is not supported by, and is contrary to, the evidence, and is the result of passion and prejudice. The assignments of error will be considered in the order named.

The jury are told in instruction No. 3 that the matters contained in instruction No. 1 are taken from the pleadings and are not evidence. By instruction No. 4 the jury were instructed that the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant was guilty of negligence in some way or ways set *863out in instruction No. 1, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, if any. By instruction No. 1, the jury were instructed:

“Plaintiff claims the cause, of said collision was the negligence of the defendant in operating his automobile in violation of the law and the ordinances of the city of Fremont, and in driving his machine on the wrong side of the street at a high and dangerous rate of speed.”

In instruction No. 6 the court instructed the jury: “It is the duty of parties driving vehicles upon the streets to obey the ordinances of the city and the laws of the state with reference to such use of public thoroughfares. And in this case, it was the duty of defendant to obey the ordinances of the city of Fremont with reference to- the use of its streets for automobiles, and also the laws of the state and the usual rules of the road. If you find the defendant failed in any or all the above particulars, such fact or facts should be considered by you with all -other evidence as tending to prove negligence.”

The appellant insists that the court, by these instructions (Nos. 1 and 6) submitted allegations of negligence where no evidence was introduced in support thereof, and cites many decisions of this court in support of this contention. We have no fault to find with the rule announced in these cases; they state the rule correctly. But were allegations of negligence submitted without evidence to support them? We think not. The theory of the plaintiff’s case was that the defendant was negligent in driving on the wrong side of the street at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed, and his failure to have his car under control, to keep a vigilant watch ahead, and that he failed to stop or check the speed of his car after seeing the team and wagon, or, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen them. The evidence was confined to these issues as nearly as possible in the trial of a case. There was, however, evidence as to the lights on the defendant’s car, and other matters pertaining to the car, its occupants, their places of residence, the course of travel before enter*864ing.upon Main street, the purpose for which defendant was traveling this street, and many facts preceding and succeeding the collision, not directly an issue in the case or alleged as a ground for recovery. Some of these acts may have been in violation of some provision of the-city ordinance or laws of the state, but no recovery thereon was sought either in the pleadings or the evidence; and, while these were not specifically eliminated by the court in its instructions to the jury, they were not presented as issues. The basis of plaintiff’s cause of action, was the alleged operation by defendant of Ms car in violation of the ordinances and the laws of the state; and, while the court’s instructions did not' specifically point- out the particular provisions of the .ordinance alleged to have been violated, yet the instructions did, in a general way,, submit their violation as alleged in the petition,- and the defendant cannot now complain, he having failed to ask specific instructions thereon. Olmsted v. Noll, 82 Neb. 147" court="Neb." date_filed="1908-06-26" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/olmsted-v-noll-6658055?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6658055">82 Neb. 147.

Again, before a reversal could be had for submitting allegations of negligence where no evidence was introduced in support thereof, it must appear that the jury were misled in their consideration of the facts of the case. Mannion v. Talboy, 76 Neb. 570" court="Neb." date_filed="1906-05-03" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/mannion-v-talboy-6656883?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6656883">76 Neb. 570. Instructions must- be considered as a whole. A consideration of the instructions given by the court on its own motion in connection with those given at the request of the defendant leaves him without complaint.

The following instruction (No. 6) was given by the court at the request of the defendant: “You are instructed that unless you find the defendant guilty- of negligence, in whole or in part, as charged in his petition, then your verdict must be for the defendant, and the burden is on the plaintiff to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was negligent, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, and that plaintiff sustained injuries as a result thereof.”

*865And, again, the court was requested by defendant and gave instruction No. 7, which reads as MIoavs: “You are instructed that certain ordinances of the city of Fremont have been introduced in evidence and as to these you are instructed that the violation of such ordinances, if you find there Avas, does not amount to negligence as a matter of laAV, but is a fact to be considered, together with all the rest of the evidence in the case, in determining whether the defendant exercised care.”

By these instructions the defendant presented to the jury substantially the same issue as stated by the court in its instruction No. 6, and thereby adopted and approved the theory of the court, and, having done so, he cannot noAV complain. Error cannot be predicated upon the giving- of an instruction substantially similar to one requested by the party seeking to reverse the judgment. Jonasen v. Kennedy, 39 Neb. 313" court="Neb." date_filed="1894-02-07" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/jonasen-v-kennedy-6648830?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6648830">39 Neb. 313. The complained-of instructions, Avhen considered Avith those given by the court on its OAvn motion, fairly presented to the jury the issues .as made by the pleadings and the evidence and are far from being prejudicial to the defendant.

Did the court err in refusing to give instructions Nos. 1, 3, 4, and 5, requested by defendant? Instruction No. 1 Avas a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant. By No. 3, the jury are instructed that, as to the allegation that the defendant Avas operating his car at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed, they should find for the defendant. By No. 4, the jury are instructed that, as to the the allegation that the defendant failed to keep vigilant Avatch ahead, they should find for the defendant. And by No. 5, the jury are instructed to find for the defendant on the allegation that the defendant failed to stop or attempt to stop or check his speed and avoid the collision. The giving of instructions Nos. 3, 4, and 5 Avould have eliminated every question of negligence alleged in the petition, other than the allegation that the defendant Avas negligent in traveling on the wrong side of the street. As to whether the defendant was driving at a dangerous *866rate of speed, and whether he was looking ahead, and whether he had his car under control, and-whether he failed to stop his car when he discovered the presence of the team and wagon in the street, or by the exercise of due care he could have discovered them, were questions of fact for the consideration of the jury, and are largely dependent upon the part of the street he was traveling upon and the rate of speed. To a great extent, they are dependent upon each other, and not subject to separation, and must be considered together. These requested instructions presented to the court the sufficiency of the evidence on the issues thus presented. As to these issues, the evidence was conflicting and it was for the jury to pass upon them under proper instructions. The plaintiff’s son, the driver of the team, testified that the defendant’s car struck the wagon tongue, knocking down both of his horses; that this happened as he was driving-on the street and just as the horses stepped on the pavement, the hind wheels of the wagon being on- the sidewalk; he says he noticed the car one-half block away (190. ft.) to the south, about the middle of the street, and that lie just let the rvagon drop down on the street and turned the horses south and close to the curb; that the car was traveling 30 miles an hour; that when it struck the tongue of the wagon it drove the wagon back to the curb, knocking down both horses, one falling back under the wagon, the other falling out on the stréet, the tongue being pulled over him; that the tongue was driven into the car, and that fire flew out of it and glass fell on the street;, that he turned the team as fast as he could after he saw the light of the approaching car; that the car stopped 100 feet from the place of collision; that the first thing- he did after he saw the car approaching was to jerk the horses around to the right; that he got them to the curb, the right-hand horse having his hind feet against it; that when he came out of the alley he looked first to the north, and, just as the horses were going down the slope, he noticed the lights *867from a car coming from the south on the west side of the street.

The plaintiff called as a' witness an employee in the Monich garage, which was across the street from the place of collision, who testified he heard a crash; that he saw tlie defendant’s car up the street in the middle or west of the middle of the street; that the hind wheels of the wagon were on the sidewalk and the front wheels in the gutter, and the horses were swung sharp to the right over against the curbing. An employee of the electric light plant testified that about 12:30 a. m. he was sitting by the side door, and a coal wagon had just passed; a few minutes later he heard a terrific smash; that it frightened his wife; that he opened the door and looked out and saw the back Avheels of the coal wagon on the sidewalk, aud noticed the left-hand horse down on the pavement. The owner of the electric garage, Avliere the defendant’s car Avas taken, testified that he saw the defendant’s car' after the collision; identified the radiator in court; said that the hood of the engine Avas Avrinkled up “some awful bad;” that the main leaf of the spring Avas doubled back, letting the front wheel slide back and jamming the bolts that held the spring to the front axle; that the front lights were tipped back, smashed completely; that .the Avheel struck something, evidently, and that enough weight came on it that doubled the spring, kind of put a kink in it; that the front axle was out of line from four to seven inches, so it was impossible to steer.

The defendant testified that from Military avenue he was driving principálly in the middle of the street; that lie slowed up a little at the Cronin residence (this was on the west side of Main street and fronting Main street), as he thought of putting one of the occupants of the car out there, but that he decided to go and put her down coming back; that he saw nothing of the team until it was possibly four or five feet away; that he Avas then traveling tAvelve miles an hour; that he put on the brakes and turned to the east; that by the time he struck the *868pole of the wagon he was going not more than half that rate. The defendant’s stenographer was called by the defendant and testified that she rode in the front seat of the car; that she did not notice the team until they were within íavo or three feet of it, and that she thought they were in about the center of the street; that she put her hands up to her face, being afraid of glass from the windshield, and defendant made a quick turn to the right and stopped the car; that the tongue Avent into the radiator, and the collision knocked one of the horses down. The other tAAro occupants of the car Avere ladies, riding in the back seat. Tlie3r say they suav nothing until they heard the crash. One testified that she was looking Avest toAvards the Cronin residence, Avhere she lived, at the time of the collision, and that the car Avas traveling in about the middle of the street.

As to Avhether the defendant was driving on the Avrong side of the street, and as to Avhether he Avas traveling at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and as to Avhether he had his car under control, Averc disputed questions of fact and properly for the consideration of the jury; and for the trial court to liaAre instructed the jury as requested by the defendant Avould have been'error. The rule in this state is: “Where the facts are disputed, it is solely the province of the jury to determine the same; and, Aidiether the facts be disputed or undisputed, if different minds might honestly draAv different conclusions from them, the case is properly left to the. jury.” Ogden v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W., 78 Neb. 804" court="Neb." date_filed="1907-04-18" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/ogden-v-camp-6657452?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6657452">78 Neb. 804, 806.

From a careful examination of the evidence in this case, Ave are convinced that the trial court did not err in refusing to direct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, and that the evidence Avas sufficient to sustain a verdict for the plaintiff. “A verdict Avill not be set aside on the ground of Avant of sufficient evidence to support it, unless the Avant is so great as to sIioav that the verdict is manifestly Avrong.” Sycamore Marsh Harvester Co. v. Grundrad, 16 Neb. 529" court="Neb." date_filed="1884-07-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/sycamore-marsh-harvester-co-v-grundrad-6644291?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6644291">16 Neb. 529.

*869This leaves for consideration the question, Is the verdict excessive and the result of passion or prejudice? That the plaintiff sustained numerous minor injuries from which he recovered is not questioned, leaving no permanent injury other than to his shoulder. The extent of his. injuries was fully presented to the jury by proper instructions. His physician testified that his permanent injury was a fracture of the coracoid process of the left shoulder, impairing the strength and limiting the action and use of his arm, and that he was also permanently affected with hysteria resulting fr.om the injury to his shoulder.

The plaintiff is a laboring man, 65 years of age, with an expectancy of 11 years, depending upon his day’s labor for a livelihood. He testified that he had no use of his left arm. At the time of the injury he was earning, and liad been for some time, $7 to $10 a day helping his son in delivering coal to the light company. The record is silent as to his occupation prior to his coming to Fremont about a year before, except for a short time he drove a team for Swift & Company in Sioux City, and before that he was engaged in farming. AAA must take judicial notice of the change of the times. At the time of the injury, as well as at the trial of the case, labor of all kind was commanding the highest price in the history of our country. This man had been and was engaged in the very hardest kind of manual labor. It is not reasonable or fair to presume that he could continue to do so the remainder of his expected days. AVliile the verdict of the jury was much more than would compensate the plaintiff for the damages sustained, yet we do not think it was the result of passion or prejudice, but rather due to the times and conditions existing at and before the trial — the seeming little value placed upon the dollar. The plaintiff is entitled 'to be fully compensated for all damages sustained, and we are convinced that, under the evidence and the changed conditions of the time, $1,000 will fully compensate him for all damages suffered. And if he will, within 20 days *870from the filing of this opinion, file a remittitur in this court of $2,000, the judgment, go reduced, will be affirmed; otherwise the case will be reversed and a new trial granted.

Affirmed on condition.

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