38 Neb. 488 | Neb. | 1893
This is an action brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover for the death of
"The jury are directed to make the special findings in answer to the following interrogatives :
“1. What was the condition of the track at the point where the forward trucks of the next to the last car in the train left the rails ?
“A. Covered by coal and cinders and other rubbish.
“2. Did the defendant know the condition of the track as it was on the morning of the accident ?
“A. Not known.
“3. Did Mr. McAnnelly have knowledge, or means of knowledge, of the condition of things at the place where ■the accident occurred ?
-“A. Not known.
“4. What caused the forward trucks of the car next to the last one to jump the rails?
“A. Cinders and coal.
“5. Was or was not the death of Mr. McAnnelly accidental ?
“A. It was not accidental.
"6. How did Mr. McAnnelly come to be thrown under the cars?
“A. It was caused by the jar received from the trucks leaving the rails.
“7. What caused the death of Mr. McAnnelly?
“A. He was crushed beneath the cars.”
A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered on the verdict.
1. The principal ground of the action is that the death was caused by the defective condition of the track, and it is objected by plaintiff in error that there is no allegation in the petition that the deceased “ did not know, or had any means of knowledge, of the defective condition of the
2. A numbér of objections are made to the introduction of evidence. It is unnecessary to review these at length. No material error has been pointed out, and no-material error in that regard was committed by the court.
3. At the close of the testimony of the plaintiff below, defendant below asked the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor. This the court refused to.do’, to which the defendant below excepted,and now assigns the ruling of the court for error. The reóord shows that there was testimony tending to sustain every proposition in the petition. Where this is the case, and a motion is made, to direct a verdict, the rule is that every point which the evidénce tends to prove, for the purposes of the motion, must be considered as established. Such a motion can only be sustained where there is a failure to prove some material fact in the case 'by reason of which no liability of the defendant to the plaintiff is shown. The motion, therefore, was properly overruled.
4. Errors are assigned in giving various instructions, and also in refusing to give several instructions asked by the defendant below. It is unnecessary to review these at length. The instructions given seem to be applicable to the testimony, and those asked were properly refused.
Affirmed.