Certiorari to the judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals bringing up the record in Eisenbarth v. Powell Bros. Truck Lines, Inc.,
“The court instructs you that it is your duty in considering the evidence, deliberating upon and determining the facts in this ease, to first decide upon the question of whether, under all the facts and circumstances there is or is not any negligence upon the part of defendant as 'defined to you by other instructions. Until this qtiestion of negligence has been determined by you, you have no right to take into consideration the nature, character or extent of the alleged Injuries to plaintiff, except as an aid to you in determining whether or not defendant was negligent, or the amount, if any, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover because of such injuries. [If the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, that is, if it is not shown to your reasonable satisfaction, by the greater weight of the credible testimony %t,pon the question of negligence that she should recover at your hands, then you should not and must not'in your deliberations- at all consider to what extent, if any, she has been injured.]
*918 “Neither passion, prejudice nor sympathy should influence you in any manner in deciding the case; for it is your sworn duty to try this case and decide it according to the evidence and the instructions. ’ ’ (Brackets ours.)
Substantially the same instruction was given in the Wolf son and Koebel cases and a shorter instruction expressing the same thought in the Clark case. In all three decisions it passed muster. Later we shall refer to the circumstances in which these rulings were made. Respondents’ opinion condemned the instant Instruction No. 7 on several grounds. First, while conceding a similar instruction was “tolerated” in the Wolf son case, they distinguished that decision on its facts and because the sole issue there was under the humanitarian doctrine, whereas — they said — there was an issue in the instant case as to plaintiff’s contributory negligence. They held the instruction was bad because the part thereof which we have enclosed in brackets cast the burden on the plaintiff to disprove her contributory negligence.
Respondents’ theory that the affirmative defense of contributory negligence was tendered below is founded on the fact that one of
‘plaintiff’s
instructions directed a verdict for her if the jury found the relator guilty of specified primary negligence and “that plaintiff was not negligent on the occasion mentioned in evidence.” They held that by this quoted clause the plaintiff, herself, injected the issue into the trial. Such was the holding on a similar plaintiff’s instruction in Brewer v. Silverstein (Mo. Div. 2),
In deciding that question we cannot construe the instruction independently, as we might do if the case were here on appeal; but are bound by respondents’ interpretation even though we think it is wrong, if the language of the instruction is open to construction and a similar instruction has never been construed otherwise by this-court. However, if the instruction is susceptible of only one meaning under rules of construction announced by our decisions, and respondents have given it another meaning, we can intervene. [State ex rel. Clark v. Shain,
Beferring back to said Instruction No. 7, it will be noticed the first paragraph thereof mentions negligence three times. These parts we have italicized, and sometimes will do so when referring to them hereafter. The first time, the jury were told they should determine preliminarily whether under all the facts and circumstances there was or was not “any negligence upon the part of defendant as defined to you Toy other instructions.” The next sentence said that until “this question of negligence” had been determined they had no right to consider plaintiff’s injuries except for'certain specified purposes. Bespondents’ opinion expressly recognized that these parts of the instruction referred only to relator’s negligence and not to plaintiff’s contributory negligence. Then came, in the same paragraph, the direction we have bracketed, that if it had not been shown by the greater weight of the testimony upon “the question of' negligence” that plaintiff “should recover,” the jury must not consider the extent of her injuries. Bespondents held this did refer to and include plaintiff’s contributory negligence as well as relator’s negligence, or at least that a jury would think so.
Belator did not submit any additional instruction hypothesizing facts which would convict plaintiff of contributory negligence and defeat her case — in other words, any instruction plainly tendering that defense. On the other hand it did submit an Instruction No. 6 (125 S. W. (2d) l. c. 902) on the burden of proof, which required the jury to find from the greater weight of the testimony that “the defendant on the occasion in question was guilty of negligence as submitted to you in the Court’s instructions,” and further told them unless they found from a preponderance of the testimony that “the defendant was guilty of negligence as defined and submitted to you in the instructions of the court,” their verdict shordd be for relator-defendant. Bespondents’ opinion held this Instruction No. 6 “clearly” was not amenable to the complaint that it imposed the burden of proof on plaintiff as to her contributory negligence. This was obviously true, both because the instruction was expressly limited to relator’s negligence, and also because by necessary inference and converse effect it authorized a verdict for plaintiff upon a' finding of relator’s negligence alone — that is to say, without requiring a further finding that plaintiff was' not negligent.
Beviewing and comparing the three instructions, it will be observed that one of plaintiff’s instructions authorized a verdict for her on certain findings including the fact that she “was not negligent on the occasion mentioned in evidence,” thereby letting in the issue of *920 contributory negligence. But relator’s Instruction No. 6 on tbe burden of proof permitted a verdict for plaintiff on relator’s sole negligence — this by telling the jury their verdict must be for relator, unless they found from a preponderance of the testimony that relator was guilty of negligence proximately causing plaintiff’s injuries. And the bracketed part of relator’s Instruction No. 7 by necessary implication declared the plaintiff was not entitled to recover unless it appeared from the greater weight of the testimony upon the question of negligence that she should recover. This imposed on plaintiff the burden of proof as to that “question of negligence,” whatever it was. Respondents held the quoted words, in connection with plaintiff’s instruction, covered both relator’s primary negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence. But the same words .read in connection with relator’s Instruction No. 6 alone, referred only to relator’s primary negligence.
In,view of the two other instructions, we do not feel we can say conclusively that the bracketed part of Instruction No. 7 was susceptible of only one meaning.. Undoubtedly respondents had the right to construe the three instructions together, and to hold, as they did,.that Instruction No. 7 covered contributory negligence. If this was correct, they might have further said the instruction conflicted with Instruction No. 6. "We have not been cited to any decision by this court where a similar set of instructions was construed. As stated by respondents, there was no issue of contributory negligence in the Wolf son case. Neither was there in the Koebel case or the Clark case.
On motion for rehearing respondents further declared Instruction No. 7 erroneous for another reason having to do with the qualifying phrase just preceding the bracketed part: “except as an aid to you in determining whether or not' defendant was negligent, . . . ” This was on the following theory. An instruction like the one under consideration, except for the omission of the phrase quoted, was denounced in Stolovey v. Fleming,
The bracketed part of Instruction No. 7 was condemned in the Koebel case, supra, 337 Mo. l. c. 573, 85 S. W. (2d) l. c. 526, for *921 still another reason, not mentioned by respondents. The qualifying phrase mentioned in the last paragraph is annexed to the cautionary direction at the beginning of the instruction, where the jury are told that until they have determined whether defendant was negligent, they have no right to consider the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injuries “except as an aid to you in determining whether or not defendant was negligent, . . Then comes the bracketed part of the instruction stating that if it has not been shown by the greater weight of the testimony on the question of negligence that plaintiff should recover, the jury should not consider the extent of plaintiff’s injuries. The qualifying phrase is not repeated in this part of the instruction. The Koebel case says that because of its omission the jury might infer they could not consider the extent of plaintiff’s injuries (even though it had a bearing on the question of negligence) in determining whether the testimony showed plaintiff should recover — in other words, the same error condemned in the Stolovey case supra. The Koebel case held the error was harmless there because the nature of plaintiff’s injuries threw no light on the question of defendant’s negligence, but respondents declared the situation is different in this case.
Respondents further condemn Instruction No. 7 because it is too much in the nature of a lecture, and because it tells the jury in what order they must consider the evidence bearing on the various issues of fact. In doing so, they followed Ryan v. Burrow,
But the Wolfson ease did say criticisms of the instructions in that record might properly have been made because there was too much repetition of the matters they attempted to cover, unnecessarily emphasizing the burden of proof and the element of sympathy, and minimizing the importance of plaintiff’s injuries, Respondents similarly charge there was too much repetition in relator’s instructions in this record, whereby the burden of proof resting on plaintiff was unduly stressed, and her in juries were minimized. Instruction No. 7 is the same in both records; the other instructions are not. But certainly there is'no basis fór a chargé’that respondénts 'contravened *922 the Wolfson ease on these matters. Without further discussion, we conclude our writ of certiorari was improvidently issued and should be quashed. It is so ordered.
