112 So. 558 | Fla. | 1927
Lead Opinion
The declaration herein alleges "that on or about the 28th day of August, 1920, the plaintiff's husband, J. J. Jandreau, was employed as a conductor on one of the cars of the defendant passing along and upon said Seventh Avenue, and plaintiff avers that at said time and place the said car of defendant was so negligently and carelessly operated by the motorman in charge thereof, and while plaintiff's said husband was standing upon the running board of said car, or was about to step upon the same, in the discharge of his duty, the said car was so negligently and carelessly permitted to run in such proximity to an automobile then and there standing along the side of the defendant's track on said street, that the body of plaintiff's said husband, the said J. J. Jandreau, was then and there struck by a portion of said automobile, by means whereof he was precipitated to the brick pavement, and sustained injuries from which he died."
A demurrer to the delaration was overruled.
The defendant pleaded (1) not guilty, (2) assumption of risk, (3) injury was caused by a fellow servant for which defendant is not responsible, (4) contributory negligence of decedent by projecting his body outward from the running board of the street car, (5) contributory negligence of decedent in failing to care for his own safety, (6) negligence of the decedent in jointly with the motorman performing the act causing the injury, for which defendant under the law is not responsible. A demurrer was filed to the third and sixth pleas, but it does not appear to have been ruled on.
The record states that the parties submitted the cause on the issues between them to a jury who returned a verdict for the plaintiff in $8,000.00 damages, for which judgment was rendered and defendant took writ of error.
The declaration in effect alleges that while the plaintiff's decedent, a conductor on one of defendant's street cars was *522
standing upon the running board of the street car, or was about to stop upon the same, in the discharge of his duty, the car was by the motorman negligently and carelessly permitted to run in such proximity to an automobile, then and there standing along the side of the defendant's track, that the body of decedent was then and there struck by a portion of said automobile and fatally injured. These with other allegations sufficiently state negligence on the part of the defendant's motorman that proximately caused the injury and do not show that the conductor was negligent or that the conductor and the motorman were "jointly engaged in performing the act causing the injury," so as to relieve the defendant of liability under Sections 4966 and 4973, Revised General Statutes of 1920. Assumption of risk is not a defense, "where the injury or death was attributable to the negligence of the employer, his agents or servants;" and the plea here did not negative that the injury sustained was due to the defendant's negligence, or that of its servant. As the declaration alleged such negligence, the plea did not meet the declaration. Sec. 4974, Revised General Statutes 1920. Therefore the fact that the plea of assumption of risk was filed and not eliminated by demurrer or motion could not have harmed the defendant. Trial was had on other pleas. See Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Holliday,
The charges complained of, if erroneous or incomplete, could not reasonably have been harmful to the defendant so as to require a reversal of the judgment. Sec. 2812, Revised General Statutes 1920; Hooker v. Johnson,
The evidence indicates that at the time of his fatal injury, the conductor was engaged in performing his duties as conductor which required him to be on the running board of the street car; that the motorman was operating the movement of the car when it ran by the standing automobile which struck the conductor, who was in the performance of his duties standing on the running board of the street car; that the street car was negligently operated by the motorman at the time of the injury to the conductor by running past an automobile standing so near to the track, which negligence was a proximate cause of the injury; that the conductor was not negligent at the time of his fatal injury; and that the conductor and motorman were not "jointly engaged in performing the act causing the injury." See Gulf, F. A. R. Co., v. King,
The judgment should not be reversed or a new trial granted in any case, civil or criminal, for errors in rulings upon the admission or rejection of evidence or for errors in giving or refusing charges, or for errors in any other matter of procedure or practice, unless it shall appear to the Court from a consideration of the entire cause that such errors injuriously affect the substantial rights of the complaining party. Nor should a judgment be reversed or a new trial granted on the ground that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, unless it appears that there was no substantial evidence to support the finding or that upon the whole evidence the verdict is clearly wrong or that the jury were *524
not governed by the evidence in making their finding. See Mathers v. Botsford,
Affirmed.
TERRELL AND BUFORD, J. J., concur.
STRUM AND BROWN, J. J., concur in the opinion.
ELLIS, C. J., dissents.
Concurrence Opinion
If this were a case of first impression, I might take a different view of the question presented, both by the demurrer to the declaration and the evidence in the case. But under the principle to which this Court is committed, and which was first announced in Gulf, F. A. R. Co. v. King, supra, it cannot in my opinion be said that a street car motorman, running a street car between corners, and the conductor of the car, engaged in collecting fares, were jointly engaged in performing the act causing the "injury," such act being the running of the car so close to a standing automobile as to strike the body of the conductor who was on the running board. *525