144 N.W. 110 | S.D. | 1913
Plaintiff brought this action seeking to recover damages for an injury which he claimed to have suffered through the negligence of defendant while he was defendant’s employee. Defendant denied that it had been guilty of negligence, and alleg’ed that plaintiff’s injury resulted from the negligence of plaintiff, and, further, that plaintiff had voluntarily assumed the risks attendant upon the condition under which he was working at the time he was injured. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff, and, a motion for new trial having been denied, defendant
Defendant has presented numerous assignments of error, the majority based upon rulings of the court in the admission and rejection of evidence, but some based, upon the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendant — the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict — and alleged errors of the court in its instructions to the jury. We have read carefully the record herein, and considered the several rulings of the court relating to the receipt of evidence, and it is clear to us that there was no prejudicial error in any of said rulings, and no important question of practice involved therein, therefore the same will' receive no further attention at our hands.
The exceptions to instructions were as follows: “The defendant excepts to the following portions of the court’s charge to the jury: (i) Wherein the court charges the jury it was the duty of the defendant to give the plaintiff a safe place to work in. (2) That it was the duty of the defendant to give the operator a reasonably safe place in which to work. (3) That all the obvious dangers he saw and understood he assumed. (4) That portion of the court’s charge in relation to damages which could be recovered by the plaintiff in this action.”
Under the instructions given, the jury mus'-t have found, and it certainly was fully justified in finding, that the plaintiff was not negligent, and that the defendant was negligent. The place where plaintiff was called upon to work after the change was not a place where danger was so imminent as to make it rash or
In closing we cannot but quote with approval the following, found in section 964 of Rabatt’s great work, which we deem' not only applicable to the facts of this case, but as announcing a doc
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.