10 Kan. 466 | Kan. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff in error is the surviving partner of the firm of Sawyer & Ficldin, who were proprietors of a stage-coach line between Chetopa and Baxter Springs. Emil J. Sauer the defendant in error, a minor, who sues by his next friend, while a passenger in one of the coaches of’ Sawyer & Ficklin was injured, and brought his action in the district court to recover damages therefor. Verdict and judgment were in his favor for $3,500. To reverse this plaintiff in error brings the record here.
The third instruction given at the instance of plaintiff and the refusal to give instructions of an opposite character are also alleged as error. That instruction is as follows:
“That if they believe from the evidence that Emil J. Sauer, while a passenger on defendant’s stage-coach was injured on .account of the negligence of defendant by the employment of a known drunken driver, that they the jury are not confined in fixing the damages proven, but will be justified in giving .exemplary damages.” •
The next question arises on the second instruction given by the court of its own motion, and the refusal to give several . embodying in slightly different statements an opposite doctrine. That instruction is as follows: ■
“ If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the injury complained of, he cannot recover. But if such negligence was only slight, or the remote . cause of the injury, he may still recover, notwithstanding such r slight negligence or remote cause.”
Several objections were raised to the admission of testimony, but none of them seem to us of sufficient importance to justify a reversal of the judgment. It is claimed that the verdict was excessive. It was for $3,500. The plaintiff’s leg was broken, with a compound fracture of the tibia. He was con