40 S.C. 80 | S.C. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action for damages came on to be heard before Judge Izlar and a jury at the October, 1892, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Spartanburg County, when a verdict for the plaintiff was rendered, and a motion for a new trial on the minutes was refused. Judgment being entered, a notice of appeal was given. The following are the grounds of appeal:
1. The jfidge erred in charging the jury: “If you should
2. In refusing to charge, as requested by defendant, “If the jury find that W. N. Boon was as likely to have died from any other disease than one arising from his leap, then their verdict should be for the defendant.”
3. In adding to his refusal to charge as above the words: “I cannot charge this request, but will say that before you can find a verdict for the plaintiff, you must be satisfied from the preponderance of the evidence that W. N. Boon died from the effect of injuries caused by the negligence of the defendant, and that this evidence was the direct or proximate cause of the injury. But if you should be satisfied by the weight of the evidence that W. N. Boon died from other causes not the direct result of injuries received through the negligence of the defendant, your verdict would have to be for the defendant” — -the error being, as with the first exception herein, of placing the cause of death, whether from injury received from his leap or whether from other causes on the same ground of proof; his honor defining “preponderance of evidence” to mean “weight of evidence,” when speaking of the cause as from the injury, and then stating, if the jury should be satisfied by “the weight of evidence” that Boon died from other causes, then the verdict should be for the defendant.
5. In refusing to grant a new trial, when there is not a scintilla of evidence that Mr. Boon was injured at all by the leap which he took to avoid collision, and not a particle of evidence that this leap was the proximate cause of his death.
6. In charging, in substance, that the defendant must show of what disease the intestate died.
7. In charging: “While I felt it my duty to say this much in relation to the law bearing upon the issues raised by the pleadings in this case, I am persuaded that the case must turn, in a great measure, upon a question of fact;” intimating that, while he gave the law, they were not to consider it, but simply decide a question of fact.
8. In charging, the main and most important question is: “What caused the death of W. N. Boon?” and saying nothing of their duty to consider the question of contributory negligence.
9. In charging, in substance, in several places, that if plaintiff proved his intestate came to his death from injuries caused by the negligence of the defendant, that he was entitled to recover, ignoring the defence of the defendant that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, even if he came to his death by its act, which defendant denies.
W. N. Boon was the engineer of a train owned and operated by the defendant railroad, the Port Royal and Western Carolina Railway Company, on or about the 4th day of October, 1890, and while making a trip from Spartanburg to Augusta, at about 10 and 32 minutes o’clock at night of that date, at a point on the railway near Waterloo, in Laurens County, in this State, while running strictly on the schedule prepared by defendant, met another train coming from Augusta, on its way to Spartanburg, which latter train, according to the testimony of the conductor in this cause, collided with the train under the charge of engineer Boon, because the conductor in charge
At the trial, by reason of the issues raised by the pleadings, the plaintiff claimed that Boon came to his death by reason of injuries received while he was forced to jump from his engine to avoid the collision that resulted from defendant’s negligence, and the defendant claimed that Boon emerged from that collision “a perfectly sound and able-bodied man,” and that his death “was due to a congestive chill, or to malarial dysentery and congestion, or some other similar disease, the result of natural causes, and in no way connected with the aforesaid collision.” Much testimony was given on all these matters, and a sharp contest between medical experts was had as to the cause of Boon’s death. The judge’s charge is unusually clear, and, inasmuch as appellants have inserted blocks of it in their grounds of appeal, we desire the charge, in its entirety, reproduced in the report of this case.
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.