13 Del. 450 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1889
(charging the jury.) The plaintiff, having.
You then have, by the plaintiff’s proof, broadly considered, a case of inexcusable wrong on the part of the defendant; and by its proof, a case where the defendant was in no default at all. In the one aspect the plaintiff would seem to be entitled to a recovery; in the other, the defendant should have yonr verdict. Now, in this conflict of testimony, the court can render you no aid in reachinga conclusion, except to say that in all cases of conflict, where such diversity cannot be reconciled so as to make one consistent harmonious narrative of events testified to, it is the province and duty of the jury to institute a mental balance, and in it weigh the moral and legal value of the proof on both sides, and, where the greatest weight or influence upon their minds and reason is, there, to that side, to yield their verdict. For, after all, positive certainty in cases of discrepancy can rarely be attained, but only a controlling probability that the testimony on one side is reasonably to be considered to be true, rather than that of the other. Where a party engages another in his service—as, for example, a service like that upon which the plaintiff was engaged—he impliedly engages to
In regard to the point pressed upon the Court, that in the case McDowell, the carshop superintendent, neglect of duty of warning on his part was neglect of duty on the part of the company, as a general proposition it is true that an employer is responsible for the act or omission of his agent, where rights of others are concerned; yet, to subject the employer to such liability, such act or omission must be satisfactorily proved, by credible testimony, to the satisfaction of the jury, and it also must not appear to them that the complainant was in any fault that led to, promoted, or contributed to the injury complained of.