112 F. 402 | 5th Cir. | 1901
In this case, the evidence having been closed, the trial judge charged the jury, among other things, apparently on his own motion, that it was the duty of the railway company to use on its engines the most approved spark arresters, and to have its engines operated with ordinary care and prudence; that if the defendant did use the most approved spark arresters, at the time in good condition, and that the engine was then and there operated with ordinary care and prudence, plaintiff could not recover, even if sparks were communicated to his cotton. The requested charges presented by the defendant, so far as they are sound, are embraced in the charge just given. It is true that the situation of the plaintiffs cotton required a degree of care on the plaintiffs part greater than would have been required if the cotton had been situated further from the track on which the defendant’s engines in the conduct of its business were compelled to pass; and if the idea of assumed risk, which the defendant’s counsel pressed, had taken the shape of an instruction to the jury as to the measure of prudent care which the situation exacted of the plaintiff, we are not prepared to say that a helpful instruction might not have been given to the jury on that subject; and, jf the request had been within the proper limitations, we are not prepared to say that the refusing of it, or the qualifying of it, as appears to have been done by the trial judge, would not have presented ground for reversal.
The trial court clearly erred in permitting the plaintiff to read the deposition of the witness B. F. Caperton when the witness was actually present in court and tendered to the plaintiff in person. Railway Co. v. Wilder, 35 C. C. A. 105, 92 Fed. 953. Until the witness, who was present in court, and whose presence in court was known to the plaintiff, had been called by the defendant, and delivered his .testimony on the stand, the plaintiff could not use the deposition in question, and then only for the purpose of impeachment, ^fter having laid the proper predicate, and given ihe witness opportunity to explain the mistake of error in his deposition. In view of the fact that the witness was called by the defendant after the deposition had been admitted over the defendant’s objection, and gave fully his explanation of the deposition and his testimony as to the subject to which it related, we conclude that the error committed is not sufficiently grave in its results to require us to reverse the case.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.