117 P. 605 | Or. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant had constructed a street railway in Klamath Falls, and plaintiff, while driving ' a wagon heavily loaded with lumber along one of the streets, found it necessary to make a turn, and in doing so ran against a rail that projected above the surface of'the street, and he was thrown from his wagon and seriously injured.
“In handling four horses, would you consider it careless to stand on a load of lumber and drive them in, coming up an incline and making a turn?”
And also this question:
“Would you consider it careless, reckless, or negligent to stand upon a wagon loaded with lumber, upon which there is no seat, driving four horses up a street with an incline and making a turn?”
Both these questions were answered in the negative, and defendant appeals.
We are inclined to think that the testimony.of skilled drivers, as to the proper and customary position of a driver, under the circumstances detailed, is admissible; but the question went further than that, and practically required the witness to give an opinion upon the ultimate fact to be decided by the jury, namely, the fact of plaintiff’s negligence. This was a usurpation of the functions of the jury, and was reversible error.
“The issue of negligence can in most cases be determined by the judgment of a jury, and the inference, conclusion, or judgment of witnesses is rejected. This rule has been applied, for example, to the question whether a bridge, road, roadway, sidewalk, track, or other place,*440 machinery, mechanical appliance, rate of speed, situation, or other thing or collection or combination of things, is safe or dangerous. The rule has also been applied to the question whether certain conduct of a person was careful or careless. And it has also been applied to other questions as to conduct, as whether it was cautious, dangerous, ‘in the line of duty,’ necessary, negligent, proper, prudent, reasonable, professionally skillful, safe, usual, or unusual.” 17 Cyc. 56 et seq., and cases there cited.
While not following the rule to the extent indicated in the text of the excerpt above quoted, and not indorsing all that is held in the cases cited in the text, we think it reasonably well settled that, where either negligence, recklessness, or carelessness constitute the ultimate fact for the jury to decide, it is not competent for an expert witness to express an opinion upon that ultimate fact, but he can only go so far as to state the usual customary method of doing an act or state from his experience the dangers, if any, attendant upon doing it in a manner suggested by the question put to him.
Outside of this error, the case seems to have been properly tried, and we deem it unnecessary to discuss the remaining assignments. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered. Reversed.