116 P. 1119 | Utah | 1911
This case was here on a former appeal. 36 Utah 307, 104 Pac. 736. There may be found á statement of facts with respect to the cause of the injury and death of plaintiff’s
The defendant was operating two sections of a freight train in the same direction. The two sections were regarded as two separate trains. The deceased was the conductor of the first section, which was the advance section. The second or rear section ran into the first causing a rear end collision and killing the deceased. The conductor of the rear section was discharged by the defendant’s train master on the day of the collision, or the day thereafter. Nine days after that he was given what is called a service letter by the defendant’s division superintendent. In that letter the superintendent stated, among other things, that the conductor of the rear or second section was, “Discharged while on train 2nd No. 81, February 5th, 1906; ran down train 1st No.. 81, which was on time, causing rear end collision. Dismissed from service on account of his utter disregard of the time-tables, rules, and instructions.” This letter was a regular printed form filled in, a form which was furnished the superintendent by the defendant for such purpose. On the former hearing the judgment in favor of the plaintiff was reversed because of the admission of this letter in evidence over the defendant’s objection. On a retrial of the case the letter was again admitted in evidence. A'judgment again was had against the defendant, from which it has prosecuted this appeal. Complaint- is again made of the ruling admitting the letter in evidence.
The ruling now, as before, involves the question of admissions of an agent to bind the principal. On the former hearing we held the letter improperly admitted upon the ground that the authority of the superintendent to write the letter and to malee the statements and declarations contained therein was not sufficiently shown. We then held that the admissibility of such an admission rests upon the principle of agency, and the authority of the agent in the particular instance to speak for the principal. On the first hearing it was not shown, nor was it claimed, that the superintendent had direct or actual authority to write such a letter or to
It is now claimed by the respondent, and denied by the appellant, that on the retrial of the case, direct and express authority of the superintendent to write the letter, and to make such statements and declarations as are contained in the letter, was shown. the appellant further contends that though the superintendent bad actual and properly delegated authority to issue service letters, still the fact of issuing such letters and of giving one to the discharged conductor being itself irrelevant to the issue and inadmissible, the declarations and statements made by the superintendent in connection therewith must likewise be held to be inadmissible. As before observed the question must be determined upon the ground of authority of the superintendent to speak for the defendant, so that his statements and declarations became the declarations and statements of the defendant. When an agent declares or states something, not in relation to any
In such case the transaction, of which the declarations and statements are a part, being itself irrelevant and inadmissible, the declarations and statements of the agent are likewise inadmissible. That is to say, had the superintendent, not in relation to any business transacted for the defendant, and. not within the scope of his agency, written to A.
This testimony is undisputed. We think the effect of it is that the superintendent was designated and appointed by the defendant to do just what was done by him, and to state just what was stated by him — the cause- of the discharge of the conductor — and that the things done and said by him in that regard were within the scope of the agency, and were done in relation to business transacted by him for the defendant. Under the circumstances now disclosed we are therefore of the opinion that the declarations and admissions of the superintendent were, in law, the statements and declarations of the defendant, and that the letter was properly admitted in evidence. (Chemical Co. v. Knight, 106 Va. 674, 56 S. E. 725; McNicholas v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co., 196 Mass. 138, 81 N. E. 889; Lynchburg Tel. Co. v. Booker, 103 Va. 594, 50 S. E. 148; Moran Bros. Co. v. Snoqualmie Falls Power Co., 29 Wash. 292, 69 Pac. 759; Kirkstall Brewery Co. v. Furness Ry. Co., 9 L. R., Q. B. Cases, 468.)
Tbe defendant requested an instruction to tbe effect that tbe jury could not render a verdict against tbe defendant on tbe doctrine of comparative negligence. It complains because it was not given, and cites many cases
Tbe entire charge of the court is hostile to and inconsistent with such a doctrine. Tbe court charged tbe jury not on tbe theory of comparative negligence, but on tbe theory that contributory negligence was an absolute bar to a recovery. Tbe test given by tbe court to tbe jury was, not whether such negligence was slight or great, as compared with tbe negligence of tbe defendant or another, but whether such negligence proximately contributed to tbe collision and injury, and whether, without it, tbe collision and injury would have occurred. Tbe court, after defining negligence
The defendant also requested the court to charge the jury that: “No man is held to a higher degree of skill or care than the fair average of his trade or profession, and the standard of due care is the conduct of the average prudent man engaged in the profession under the same circumstances. The test of negligence, so far as concerns the employees of the second section of train 81 in this case, is the same, and it matters not that they might have operated their train in a safer or less dangerous way. Tou cannot say that it was negligently operated, unless you find from a preponderance of the evidence that it was not operated in the usual and customary way commonly adopted by railroad trainmen of average experience and prudence.”
The court refused to charge as requested, but charged the jury as follows: “In this case the defendant is not held to any greater or higher degree of care than that customarily used by railroads generally in the operation of their trains. If, therefore, you find from the evidence that the second section of train eighty-one was being operated in the usual and ordinary way for running freight trains, under the conditions existing at the time of the accident, such methods would not be negligence, and your verdict should be for the defendant.”
Complaint is made of this ruling. The contention is that the defendant was entitled to have the court charge as requested, and that the court did not do so. In the first place, theie was no evidence rendering such a charge pertinent. As before observed, the defendant was operating two trains in the same direction. The rules of the defendant required that “trains in the -same direction must keep at least five minutes apart, except in closing up at stations or at meeting and passing points;” that “a train must not arrive at a station in advance of its schedule time;” that “all except first-class trains will approach yard limits under full control, and be prepared to stop within the limits of vision, and that
In the next place, while in some cases and under some circumstances it is proper to show the customary or usual man
“The effect and purpose of the evidence is to aid the jury in forming their judgment of what the party was bound to do, or was justified in doing, under all the circumstances of the case. What had been done by others previously, however uniform in mode it may have been shown to have been, does not make a rule of conduct by which the jury are to he limited and governed. It is not to control the judgment of the jury, if they see that in the case under consideration it is not such conduct as a prudent man would adopt in his own affairs, or not such as a due regard to the obligations of those employed in the affairs of others would require them to adopt. It is evidence of what is proper and reasonable to be done, from which, together with all the other facts and circumstances of the case, the jury are to determine whether the conduct in question in the case .before them was proper and justifiable.”
The same principle is also illustrated in the cases of Wabash Railroad Co. v. McDaniels, 107 U. S. 454, 2 Sup. Ct. 932, 27 L. Ed. 605; Grand Trunk R. R. Co. v. Richardson, 91 U. S. 454, 23 L. Ed. 356, and in the case of Spiking v. Railway & Power Co., 33 Utah 313, 93 Pac. 838, where the present Chief Justice well said: “There are some things that it may be negligent to do or omit to do, although all others do or omit to do them. This is well illustrated in the case of Webster v. Symes, 109 Mich. 1 [66 N. W. 580] and other cases there cited. Were it not so, a driver of an
We think, under the circumstances, no error was committed in refusing to charge as requested. We are of the opinion that the judgment of the court below ought to be, and it therefore is, affirmed, with costs.