48 Ind. App. 623 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
This action was brought by appellant to recover damages for personal injuries, which he alleges were received by him while alighting from one of appellee’s street cars in the city of Indianapolis, upon which he had been riding as a passenger.
The complaint was in one paragraph, to which the appellee filed an answer of general denial and also an answer setting up the two-year statute of limitations. Appellant filed a reply in general denial to the second paragraph of answer, and upon the issues so formed the cause was submitted to a jury for trial. A general verdict was returned in favor of appellee, and appellant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and judgment was rendered for appellee. The only error assigned for reversal is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial.
This instruction informed the jury that the burden was upon plaintiff to establish by evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury, the material averments of his complaint. The law requires the plaintiff to prove the material averments of his complaint by a fair preponderance of the evidence, and the claim of appellant is that this instruction requires a higher degree of proof than the law exacts. The form of expression used in this instruction is not to be commended, and has been expressly condemned by the supreme court of Illinois, in the case of Mitchell v. Hindman (1894), 150 Ill. 538, 37 N. E. 916. In that case it appears that an instruction, that stated that plaintiff was “bound to prove to the satisfaction of the jury by a clear preponderance of the evidence,” etc., had been requested and refused by the trial court. It was held on appeal that the instruction was erroneous, and that it was properly refused. The language used in the instruction under consideration is not identical with that condemned in the Illinois case, but it is sufficiently
In the third instruction, given at the request of plaintiff, the court told the jury that the issues were to be determined by a preponderance of the evidence, and also informed the jury what was meant by said term. In other instructions the jury was repeatedly told that if certain facts were proved by, a preponderance of the, evidence, it should find such facts by the verdict. While we do not approve of the form of expression used in this instruction to indicate the degree of proof
The effect of this instruction was to inform the jury that if it found that plaintiff was injured by reason of defendant’s negligence, as alleged in the complaint, and suffered pain by x*eason thereof, and if it further found that he was, at the time, suffering injury and pain as a result of ptomaine poisoning, then it would be incumbent upon plaintiff to prove what part of the damages and suffering was due to the negligent injury and what part was due to the disease; and if, from the evidence, the juxy was unable to determine the extent of the damages and suffering that were due to the injury complained of, as distinguished from, such damages and suffering as were due to the disease, then there could be no recovery for such damages and suffering.
In such a case, defendant has a right to offer evidence that plaintiff was suffering from a disease, and to prove the character and extent of the pain that would probably result from such disease, and to have this evidence considered by the jury in mitigation of damages; but it has no right entirely to escape the payment of damages for pain and suffering which its negligence has partly caused.
In the case of Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Falvey, supra, our Supreme Court cites with approval the ease last eited and quotes from the opinion the following language: “It was certainly impossible for the plaintiff to prove, or for the jury to find how much of the injury was due to either cause alone. It was wholly impossible to apportion the damage between the two causes. Shall this difficulty deprive the plaintiff of all remedy! We answer no. The wrong of the defendant placed the plaintiff in this dilemma, and it cannot complain if it is held for the entire damage.”
The cases eited as authority for this decision are not, in all respects, identical with the case at bar; but the analogy is so close that we have no .hesitancy in applying to the decision of this ease the principles that have been announced
We cannot go to the extent insisted upon by appellee. It is true that the rulings and judgment of the trial court are
We do not go to the extent of holding that every error shown by the record will be presumed to be prejudicial; but we do hold that where the error shown by the record was of such a material and substantial nature that it naturally would, and probably did, influence the result prejudicially to the party complaining, a prima facie case of error is made out. In order to overcome this pñma facie case, it must appear affirmatively from the record that the error has been cured or rendered harmless.
These instructions were applicable to a material issue in the case, and were of such a character that they naturally would and most probably did influence the jury prejudicially to appellant. The record therefore discloses harmful error for which the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant a new trial.