95 Neb. 484 | Neb. | 1914
This is an action for damages resulting from a personal injury. It is alleged in the petition that plaintiff was employed by the defendants, who were partners, and who had the contract for the erection of the new courthouse in Douglas county, situated in Omaha; that, while in the discharge of his duties as the employee of defendants, and under the direction and charge of their foreman, a certain wire cable was used in connection with a block and pulley in hoisting building material to the dome of said courthouse; that, while the said work was being prose
Defendants answered admitting their partnership relation, their contract for the erection of the Douglas county courthouse, that plaintiff was in the employ of defendants at the time alleged in the petition, and that, while so employed, he received a slight injury; but allege that whatever injury plaintiff received was by his own contributory negligence; that the signal to hoist was not given until plaintiff gave notice to the foreman that the load was ready to hoist, and when the machinery was started plaintiff carelessly and negligently placed his hand in a place of danger, and by reason of his own carelessness the slight injury was inflicted. The assumption of risk and the act of plaintiff’s fellow servant were also pleaded, as was a denial of all negligence on the part of defendants. Plaintiff replied in general denial. A jury trial was had, which resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $1,500, on which a judgment was rendered. Defendants appeal.
It is contended that the district court erred in giving instructions numbered 5, 8, 10 and 14 upon its own motion. The giving of these instructions was severally assigned for error in the motion for a new trial, but we are unable to find any specific discussion of them in appellants’ brief. The fifth is, in substance, that the burden of proof is upon plaintiff to establish negligence on the part of defendants by a preponderance of the evidence, and that to recover he must prove, first, that he was injured at the time and place substantially as alleged in the petition; second, that defendants were negligent in giving the signal to the engineer to start the hoisting apparatus while plaintiff was in the act of untwisting the wire cable ropes attached to 'the block; and, third, that defendants’ negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. The eighth instruction is that negligence is not presumed, but must be proved, not necessarily by direct evidence, but facts must be established from which a reasonable inference of negligence arises; if not, negligence is not proved. The above is amplified in a later part of the instruction, but we can perceive no infraction of any rule of law therein. The tenth is that, if plaintiff gave the signal to the foreman for the movement of the engine, which resulted in plaintiff’s injury, he could not recover, and the verdict should be for defendants. The fourteenth is simply a direction for the jury to select a foreman and sign the verdict which conforms to their finding. We are unable to detect any reversible error in these instructions. It is also assigned that the jury failed to follow instructions numbered 6, 7, 9 and 11. These instructions are general ones usually given upon the subjects involved in the case, and properly directed the minds of the jury to the issues presented, leaving it to the jury to apply the law to such facts as they might find proved. Our attention is
We desire, again, to call attention to section 8192, Rev. St. 1918, and to tbe rules of this court, governing tbe matter of the preparation of briefs. While appellants’ brief in this case shows much labor and care in its preparation, it is more of a general classification of subjects, with citations of authorities, than a brief upon tbe particular questions involved in tbe case.
The judgment of tbe district court is
Affirmed.