Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Hand

7 Kan. 380 | Kan. | 1871

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kingman, C. J.:

1. Court; tv lien InTwkfn113’ eiraes. A question is raised in limine, of controlling importance. The facts necessary to understand it are these: The verdict in the case was returned and judgment entered thereon on Saturday the 5th of December, and at the close of the day the court adjourned to Monday, the 7th; but neither on Monday, the 7th, nor on Tuesday, the 8th, was any court held, the district judge being absent. On the 8th of December the motion for a new trial was filed with the clerk. On the 9th, the judge having reached Lawrence, the court was opened, and the motion for a new trial was heard and overruled, and time given to make a case; and that case so made raises all the questions but one made in this court. It is insisted by defendant in error that all the proceedings had on Wednesday the 9th were coram non judice, and present no basis on which this court can act. The record shows that on Monday, the 7th, and on Tuesday, the 8th, the court was adjourned by the sheriff, the order reciting the absence of the judge, being detained by a severe storm. Section 719 of the civil code is referred to as sustaining the correctness of the action of the sheriff. This section seems clearly to refer to the beginning of a term, and therefore is not applicable to this case. It was inserted for the sole purpose of saving the term if the judge was detained from the place for any cause : Thomas v. Fogarty, 19 Cal., 644; People v. Sanchez, 24 Cal., 17. By the common law *387a failure to open the court on the first day of the term wrought a loss of the whole term: People v. Bradwell, 2 Cow., 445. The great inconvenience arising from this principle early led to its correction by legislation. Accordingly the English Parliament in the 3 Geo. IY, 18, made provision that the court might be opened at some day subsequent to the first day of the term, and that all records and proceedings should be made up as of the first day of the term; 2 Bac. Ab., title Courts, p. 714; and our examination has shown that similar laws have been passed in many of the States. This section of our code having only reference to the beginning of the term, the act of the sheriff in adjourning the court, was simply a nullity. Yet we do not think that the term was lost by the adjournment of the court on Saturday till Monday, and its not convening till Wednesday. The term of the court is fixed by law. Having once opened, it so continues till the term expires, or an adjournment sine die is made. The adjournment from day to day does not suspend its functions. After the court has adjourned for the day, it is a common practice for grand juries to continue their sessions, swear witnesses, pursue their investigations, and find bills; and petit juries frequently remain, out all night in deliberation, and make up their verdicts, while the journal shows that the court has adjourned. Each of these juries is part of the court, performing important functions; and the court is always in session in fact, so that it can protect the juries, and enforce proper conduct on their part. “Eor all general purposes the court is considered as in session from the commencement till the close of its term.” Barrett v. The State, 1 Wis., 175. In the case just cited, the court had adjourned till the next day, and some hours after the adjournment, and before the next day had begun, received a verdict in a *388criminal case, which was held good, on grounds that necessarily cover the case under consideration. At common law the whole period of a term was looked upon as a single day, and everything done at the term was regarded as done of that day. We need not point out what innovations our statutes have made on this doctrine, but we nowhere find it entirely abrogated. The statute still makes judgment liens revert to the first day of the term at which the judgment is rendered. There is an evident purpose on the part of courts to so construe the law, if possible, as will uphold the sessions of courts actually doing business. See Womack v. Womack, 17 Texas, 1; Cook v. Skelton, 20 Ill., 107; Jones v. State, 11 Ind., 357. In this case we find there present the judge, the clerk, and other ministerial officers at a time and place where it is by law authorized to be held, properly organized at the beginning of the term, and performing the functions of a court. This must be held to be a court legally constituted, and fully authorized to transact business. 2 Bae. Ab., 6, 16, title Courts. This conclusion makes it necessary to examine the various questions raised in the record.

rieaimg; sumoTvnS'icfect , I. The first of these is, that the petition is defective in this, that it does not state that the injury was occasioned without the fault of plaintiff. As the plaintiff does not have to prove this fact, it is not clear upon what ground it ought to be stated in the petition. If his negligence appears in the case as contributing to the injury, then he cannot recover; but this is matter of defense. We do not now decide the point. It was not made in the district court. The petition on any ruling states facts sufficient to uphold the verdict, and even if the omission was a defect, it could not be taken advantage of after verdict and in this court for the first time.

*3892. Evidence; petent/ II. The next objection is to the admission of testimony. The petition states that the road was defective, and by reason of the bad condition thereof the cars were thrown from the track and plaintiff injured. To support this allegation, testimony was introduced tending to show that the accident took place on the 10th of April, and that the road was in bad condition previous to that time, even in March, and that one or more accidents to,trains had occurred at or near the same place in March. It is claimed that showing the road to be bad in March does not show it was so on the 10th of April. There was much conflicting testimony as to the condition of the road, and it was not improper to permit the plaintiff, who was a stranger, to show the condition of the road two or thi’ee weeks previous to the accident. It may have been somewhat remote, but really went to show the condition of the road at one time, and by other testimony tending to show that it remained in the same condition up to near the time of the accident was proper to go to the jury. If a plaintiff was confined to the precise moment of an accident to prove the condition of the road he would in almost every case be helpless ; he must be allowed some latitude, and in this case it did not go too far. The same remarks apply to the testimony as to the accidents occurring in March to other trains. It is true, as claimed by plaintiff in error, that they might have occurred from defective cars, or from bad management in the running of the trains; but at any rate they were facts, and connected as they were with this accident by being at and near the same points on the road were properly submitted to the jury. If they did not Bhow the road to be in bad condition they tended strongly that way.

*3903. Defective railaiíegatum and pi00i' *389III. The plaintiff in error complains of the instructions *390of the court. ¥e have examined them with great care, and will state our conclusions briefly. The issue is formed upon the averment that the track of the road of defendant was deféctive, and by reason of that defect the car in which plaintiff was riding as a passenger was thrown from the track, and the plaintiff’ injured. The jury were correctly instructed that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show the defect as alleged. The defendant below asked eleven instructions, four of which were given as asked. The others were given with a modification by the court, which was duly excepted to. The purport of these several instructions was, that if the road was good, or was perfect, or if the preponderance of the testimony showed the road to be good, or if it was to all appearance perfect, or if immediately before and after the accident the road was perfect at the time and place where the cars went off the track, then the plaintiff could not recover. Each of these instructions was really intended to accomplish but one purpose, arid that was to confine the attention of the jury to the condition of the track at the precise place where the cars went off the track, and to each of them the court added this modification : “ But if any part of the track from the place where the cars run off the track to the place where they turned over was not in good order and good condition, and caused or contributed to the injury of the plaintiff, the goodness of the track at the place where the cars run off will not excuse the defendant.” The peculiar bearing of the instructions, and the importance of the modifications becomes apparent, when it is stated that the evidence shows that the train to which the accident occurred was running east; that it was a freight train, with a passenger car attached; that about seventy or eighty feet west of a bridge the passenger car *391and two or three freight cars run off the rails, and continued to run along side the rails across the bridge, which was one hundred feet in length, and until the train was stopped, some seventy or eighty feet east of the bridge, when the passenger car tipped over, and the plaintiff received the injuries complained of. Now it appears from the testimony in behalf of the railroad company, that the train was running at the rate of six or seven miles an hour on a three-degree curve; that at the place where the car went off the rail, the track was in perfect order, and the rails were in perfect line after the accident occurred. According to the testimony of Smead, an éngineer who examined the track immediately after the accident, it was unaccountable; that between the place where the cars ran off and where the passenger car tipped over, the track was thrown out of line, and the ties on the bridge were displaced. There was testimony showing that a different manner of constructing the bridge was, in the opinion of some engineers, safer than the one adopted in building the bridge where the accident occurred. It becomes important in deciding the propriety of the modification made by the court to the instructions asked by defendant below to bear in mind that the claim of plaintiff below rested on the allegation that the accident occurred by reason of a defective track. Whether the defect existed in the track at a place still further west than where the cars went off the track, or at the place, or at the bridge, or east of the bridge, it could make no difference, if the defect caused or contributed to the injury of plaintiff. If the plaintiff established the fact, it was all he had undertaken to do in his pleading, and all the law required him to do; and to this extent only the modification of the instructions went, and was properly made.

*3924. ome and .km ¡ g«cTrequ!red. IV. At the request of plaintiff below, the court instructed the jury that, “if the defendant could have prevented the accident by the utmost human sagacity or foresight, with respect to their track, then the defendant is liable.” This is established law. The defendant sought to have it explained to the jury by requesting the court to tell them “ that the utmost human sagacity required of the defendant did not require of the defendant to take such extraordinary measure in constructing, operating, and maintaining its railroa . ib are not and have not been in use in the constructing, operating, or maintaining of railroads.” This the court refused to give, and its refusal is assigned as error, and we are asked to correct it. ¥e know of no reason peculiar tc +1 's State why human life and safety are not as valuable ^¿re as elsewhere; at any rate, it is not the province of courts to cheapen it, by construing away established principles, laid down to make life secure.

Fault is found with other instructions, but hardly such as requires attention. ¥e are convinced that the questions at issue were properly submitted to the jury, under instructions such as the law requires.

5. Damages; ex-trial. V. The plaintiff in error, in the motion for a new trial, set up as one of the grounds therefor that the damages assessed were excessive, and given under the influence or passion and prejudice, in overruling the motion for a new trial the court found that the assessment of the jury beyond the sum of two thousand dollars was excessive, but found nothing in the evidence or otherwise, save the amount of the verdict, to show passion or prejudice on the part of the jury; but inasmuch as the case was to be taken up on error on other grounds, which it was desirable to have settled, overruled the motion for a new trial.

*393An examination of the evidence has convinced us that the damages awarded are so excessive as to show plainly that the verdict was given under the influence of passion or prejudice, and ought to be submitted to the judgment of another jury. The only permanent injury the plaintiff received to his person, was in the fourth metacarpopholangeal articulation of the right-hand,” which, being translated, means that there was an injury to the ligaments of the third finger of the right hand, causing a slight deformity, and some loss of power in the hand. Besides some bruises elsewhere, he had received an injury to his lung, which caused some uneasiness and renders him more liable by exposure to attacks of a pulmonary character. This injury was nearly overcome on the 1st of May, 1867, according to the testimony of his own physician. There was some loss of time, but not great, for it appears that he was moving about in Kansas till he went to Chicago about the 20th of April, and on the 8th of May it appears from one of his own witnesses he was traveling from Chicago to St. Paul. His business was selling lamps on commission, at which he was making $25 per day, according to his own testimony. Take the testimony altogether, of which we have given but a few points most favorable to the plaintiff, below, and we are constrained to send the case back for a new trial. Of course, courts are reluctant to interfere with the verdicts of juries on the ground of excessive damages; but to uphold them where a great wrong has been done, would, as a precedent, be doing an infinite wrong to the community. The rights of parties are submitted to the unbiased judgment of juries, not to their passions or prejudices, and where it is apparent that these feelings have entered into and influenced their decision, it becomes the duty of the court to see that a tribunal organized to- se*394cure justice is not perverted from its proper purpose to become tbe instrument of oppression and injustice.

The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded on this ground alone.

Brewer, J., concurring. Valentine, J., not sitting.
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