John Humpall had been in defendant’s employment twenty-one years. At the time of receiving the injury complained of, he was engaged as clinker pitman and in handling coal for engines. The clinker pit was about twenty feet long, three and one-half feet deep, below the top of the rails, four feet wide at the top, and three feet at the bottom. At the north side of the track and two or three feet therefrom was a coal shed some sixty-eight feet long with an elevator platform eighteen feet in length at the east end which was about ten feet west of the pit. East of the pit was the turntable. Ordinarily the engine, after being switched on this track, would couple onto the coal car being unloaded at the shed and back or push it over and past the clinker pit, stopping over it to be cleaned out. In the afternoon of February 21, 1906, according to Humpall’s testimony, the coal car was standing with the east end seven or eight feet from the platform. Humpall, observing that the couplers were open, removed the block from the car wheel and signaled the engineer to come on, which he did and coupled onto the car, moving it about four feet, and, upon signal, it was stopped so that the end was at or a little east of the center of the pit. He then went to the east end of the pit between the rails, placed his left hand on the south rail, and'jumped to the bottom some two or three feet from the end. The car was then standing, and he turned south, seized a stick at the lower end, leaning in the southeast corner of the pit, with which to signal the engineer to come ahead, but, upon rising and turning back to do so, noticed the ear was over him. He dropped down, but in some way his right hand got or remained on the rail about two and one-half feet west of the end of the pit, and the wheels ran over it. Three fingers necessarily were amputated at the second joint, and the little finger at the first joint. Evidence of contradictory tes *411 •timony by him at a prior trial was adduced, but he attempted to explain this by testifying "to subsequent measurements. Also there was evidence of contradictory statements. On the other hand, the theory of defendant, which evidence tended to sustain, was that the engine was coupled to the coal car west of the pit; that Humpall immediately removed the block from under the wheel, signaled the engineer to come on, and started on a run to the east on the south side of the track; that when he was about half the car length the engine moved slowly forward; that Humpall turned in front of the moving car and jumped into the pit from the side, but not in time to avoid injury from the wheels of the car. On the trial all allegations of negligence were withdrawn except two: (1) That the engineer moved the engine over the cinder pit without giving warning to Humpall; and (2) that he so did without having received a signal from Humpall so to do. The claim for damages was assigned to plaintiff, and this action begun for recovery therefor.
*412
Whether by design or inadvertently in the heat 'of argument counsel succeeded in getting four matters before the jury, none of which were entitled to consideration: (1) The poverty of plaintiff; (2) the wealth of defendant; (3) that it would cost plaintiff one-half of what he recov *416 ered for counsel fees; and (4) that the court would reduce the verdict if for too large an amount. True there was some evidence that plaintiff was without means, but this did not authorize counsel to make use of the circumstance as a basis of argument contrasting his poverty with defendant’s wealth. Neither circumstance was entitled to -the slightest weight in determining the amount of damages to be allowed. But counsel withdrew the remark concerning defendant’s millions in a way to obviate any prejudice, for what' he said plainly indicated that this was not for the jury’s consideration, and but for what followed we should not be inclined to interfere. With the approval of t[ie court, however, he urged the jury to avoid their duty in assessing the damages on the basis of fair compensation and to return an excessive verdict - so that the court would be required to reduce it. This was a direct appeal to the jurors to forswear their duty and shift the burden to the court, and ought not to have been tolerated. The line of argument pursued, in effect, was that the jurors would be blamable if the assessment of damages were too low, while they might shirk all responsibility by putting it too high and allow the court to reduce it. Counsel’s explanation that this was in response to the contention of defendant’s attorney that the verdict should be small but emphasized the objections to what had been said by reasserting the same as proper for consideration. In view of the attitude of the court, it may well be assumed that the jury took. these matters, as well as the amount of plaintiff’s attorney’s fees, into account, and they are to be regarded as objectionable as though improperly injected as evidence.
The criticisms of the eleventh and thirteenth instructions will be obviated on another trial. A careful examination of the record has convinced us that the evidence was such as to carry the case to the jury.' — Reversed.
