165 Mo. App. 240 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
(after stating the facts). — I. The trial court did not err in refusing to give plaintiff’s instruction No. 3 telling the jury they should consider the evidence of defendant’s verbal admissions with caution. Plaintiff would have been helped, not hurt, if the jury too freely accepted the evidence (it consisted solely'of plaintiff’s own testimony) of defendant’s admissions, therefore the refusal of this instruction could not have been prejudicial to the plaintiff. If the instruction was intended to refer to evidence of plaintiff’s admissions there is nothing to indicate that fact, and the trial court cannot be convicted of error in treating the instruction according to its face value to the party offering it, which was nothing. Besides, there is controlling authority for the proposition that an appellate court will not reverse a case because of the refusal of the trial court to instruct that evidence or verbal admissions is to be received with caution. [State v. Clump, 16 Mo. 385.] We need not pass on the question whether this instruction would have constituted an improper comment on the evidence.
II. Plaintiff contends that the judgment should be reversed because by giving defendant’s instructions No. 1½ and No. 2 the trial court referred the jury to the pleadings to learn what the issues were, but'we are not so persuaded. Reference in an instruction to the pleadings where the facts necessary to be found are fully told in other instructions will not war
III. Nor is there any merit in plaintiff’s criticism of the action of the trial court in giving defendant’s instruction No. 3. Substantially similar instructions were approved by our Supreme Court. [Henry v. Grand Ave. Ry. Co., 113 Mo. 525, 21 S. W. 214; Feary v. Street Ry., 162 Mo. 75, 62 S. W. 452; Maxey v. Street Ry. Co., 95 Mo. App, 303, 68 S. W. 1063.] It is true that in the instructions so approved, the word “accident” alone occurred and not the words “accident or casualty,” but the difference is immaterial as “casualty” is a synonym for “accident.” Indeed the instruction in the case at bar is more to be commended as .against an objection from the plaintiff than were those which the Supreme Court approved, for it expressly states that the “accident or casualty” must have been without negligence on the part of the defendant, while in the instructions so approved this thought was left to be inferred from the use of the word “mere,” the words “mere accident” being held to mean, or be equivalent to, the words “not by defendants’ negligence.” Plaintiff suggests, however, that there was no evidence in this case that the fire occurred through “casualty or accident,” but this suggestion does not meet with our approval. The injury must have happened by inevitable accident, or by someone’s negligence. [Maxey v. Street Ry. Co., 95
IY. Nor were defendants’ instructions Nos. 4 and 4½ fairly open.to the objection that they single out one particular act or fact at issue and place undue prominence upon it. By giving No. 4 the court did no more than point out distinctly to the jury one of the issues of fact formed by the pleadings and instruct them separately on it. This was not error. [Coleman v. Drane, 116 Mo. 387, 22 S. W. 801.]
In instruction No. 4½, the court, in placing the burden of proof upon plaintiff, mentioned one issue particularly and the others generally. If by so doing it had singled out as a controlling issue that which was not one in fact, this would have amounted to misdirection and been error, as, if it had given the impression that it was absolutely necessary to prove one particular ground of negligence and not sufficient to prove any of the others; but it did not do that. The question whether sparks from defendants’ engine caused the fire was, from defendants’ standpoint, a controlling issue in the case, without proving the affirmative of which, plaintiff could not possibly prevail and all other issues would become unimportant. At the most, this instruction might be said to have singled out as a controlling issue that which was one in fact. If so it was legally correct and plaintiff cannot fairly complain of it.
A plaintiff and defendant occupy different positions where there are two issues in the case, each of
V. Lastly, plaintiff complains of defendants’ 5th instruction, that it injects into the case a ground of negligence not pleaded, viz., that defendants were neg
On the whole we are of the opinion that this cause was fairly tried without substantial error. The judgment is affirmed.