There was no error in refusing to submit the issues tendered by the defendant. Those framed by the court involved the only questions left open for trial.
Tillett
v. Railroad,
There is no merit in the exception to the refusal of the court by means of an additional issue to re-open the question of damages, which was finally settled and determined when this court granted a new trial limited virtually to two issues. It is'needless, therefore, to discuss the point presented by counsel on the argument. It was not error to refuse to allow defendant to show in diminution of damages already ascertained by a verdict that the permanent injury to plaintiff’s eve-sight was due to his failure to have. them properly treated after the accident. Such questions could only be considered by the jury in arriving at the quantum of damage. The court considered on the former hearing all of the questions then presented, and determined to settle all of them except those specifically mentioned, as they are empowered to do under the recent statute, by a jyer curiam judgment. The Court would have settled the w.hole case by such judgment had a new trial been refused upon every issue, and its ruling would have concluded the defendants upon all points. Although the judgment left certain questions open for another trial to the extent that the verdict was undisturbed, it was final — not subject to be set aside by any subsequent action of the court or jury. We must assume, if we had no actual knowledge of the matter, that the defendant had opportunity on a former trial to present to the jury the views of its counsel upon *1043 the question of permanent injury, and that this Court, upon reviewing the case on appeal determined that as to that matter it had no reason to complain. The plaintiff filed a petition to rehear, and at his instance the per curiam was modified. The defendant rested on its oars, and, having 'done so, is not entitled to the benefit of a rehearing on another appeal upon questions that are behind us. The defendant’s counsel objected to the introduction of the deposition of Ur. Graham, a specialist, in which he gave his opinion as an expert that the loss of eye-sight had been caused by the injury to the plaintiff’s head, sustained by reason of his falling in the car; and plaintiff’s couusel thereupon withdrew it, presumably upon the theory that it was conceded to be irrelevant as to any question before the jury.
The question whether the lessor railway company is answerable jointly with the lessee Company operating its road for the injuries due to the negligence of the latter, and if so, what was the extent of such liability, arose in
Logan
v. Railroad,
Whether the plaintiff1 bought, his ticket before or after the accident, it is not denied that he got upon the car for the purpose of taking passage on it, and that he did pay his fare subsequently. He was therefore, in any aspect of the evidence, a passenger. See authorities cited in
Daniel
v.
Railroad, 117
N. C., 592. The plaintiff boarded the train while other passengers were getting on, and at a place where the company was accustomed to receive them, and had a right to receive them.
Browne
v. Railroad,
Affirmed.
