147 Mo. 679 | Mo. | 1899
— This is an appeal from an order setting aside a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant and granting to plaintiff a new trial. The action is for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff on account of being struck and run over by a team and wagon of defendant, going east on the north side of Washington avenue in the city of St. Louis, under the following circumstances:
At about six o’clock on the evening of January 6, 1895, plaintiff took his position on the pavement on the north side of Washington avenue about forty feet- west from the west line of Eighth street, for the purpose of boarding a Washington avenue street car when it should come along going west. When a car came opposite to where plaintiff was standing he stepped from the sidewalk to get upon it, but only got three or four feet from the sidewalk towards the car when he collided with one of two mules which were hitched to a wagon
After the testimony was all in, the court at the instance of the plaintiff and defendant and on its own motion gave eight instructions covering the different phases of the case as was then presented for consideration; but during the opening argument to the jury, plaintiff’s counsel commented upon the fact that the driver of the team was at the time of the accident driving on the north instead of the south side of the street, and told the jury that that fact, in connection with the accident, indicated negligence upon the part of the driver sufficient to justify a verdict against the defendant. As soon as plaintiff’s counsel had concluded his opening argument, defendant’s counsel asked, and the court gave this additional instruction: “The jury are instructed that the fact that the driver of the team in question was at the time of the accident driving eastwardly along the north side of Washington avenue, does not constitute negligence upon his part, or upon the part of defendant.”
Plaintiff made no objection at the time or afterwards to the giving of that instruction based on the ground that it was “irregularly given.” When the court gave the instruction it said to plaintiff’s counsel that he could continue his opening
1. In giving instructions asked by defendant.
2. In the instructions given to the jury on its own motion.
3. In giving contradictory instructions.
4. “The instructions given at the instance of defendant and at its (the court’s) own motion, were misleading.”
Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was-sustained, and the court specified of record its ground therefor as follows: “The motion for new trial is sustained on the ground that the instructions (the two given during the argument of the case) were irregularly given.” Erom that order after the usual preliminaries defendant prosecuted this appeal.
Erom an examination of the instructions given as a whole, we find no declaration of law announced therein unfavorable or prejudicial to the right of the plaintiff, that for
Of the last one of the two instructions given during the argument of the case, surely plaintiff ought not now to be heard to complain of its irregularity, as it was given at the time on his express demand, nor should he be permitted now to reap the benefit from an irregularity resulting from the giving of either one'or both of the last two instructions (if such it could be properly characterized), when he did not in his motion ask for a new trial predicated upon that ground, nor did he object to the giving of either of said instructions, on that ground, at the time they were asked for and given. Was then, the giving of the last two instructions or either of them, after the argument in the case had been begun, such an irregularity or* error as alone would give justification to the court’s action in awarding a new trial based upon that fact solely.
This court has never held the provisions of section 2188, Revised Statutes 1889, as mandatory, or that the section should be so construed as to deny to the trial court the right to give instructions in any cause, except just where “the evidence is concluded and before the case is argued or submitted to the jury,” or that an instruction if given at any different or later time -during the progress of a trial should be treated and held, for that reason alone, as an irregularity constituting grounds for the granting of a new trial. Nor do we think the trial judge has the right to set aside a verdict rendered in his court for the sole reason that an instruction has been given during the progress of the trial out of the usual time for the giving of same as indicated by section 2188, supra, without it further finds and believes that the instructions as given at the designated time had the effect of working a prejudice against one or the other of the parties to the suit that
The question as to the right of the trial court to instruct the jury at a time otherwise than immediately after the evidence is concluded and before the case is argued, has frequently been before this court, yet we know of no instance, where on the ground of time alone,, the giving of an instruction has been held fatal to a verdict predicated thereon. The practice has ever been to sustain verdicts and judgments predicated upon instructions given at any and all times during the consideration of the case by the jury, provided the instruction or instructions announce a correct proposition of law, applicable to the facts of the case, and is given to the jury in open court, and the parties to the suit have been given an opportunity to know its contents and to note his or their exceptions thereto, if desired, or to ask other instructions-explanatory thereof, if necessary.
It was not only within the authority of the court to give the instruction asked by defendant at the time it was given, but we think it was likewise a clear duty of the court made necessary by the false argument of the counsel for the plaintiff, in addressing the jury, to the effect that the jury might infer negligence from the fact that defendant’s driver, was at the time of the collision, driving along the north side instead of on the south side of the street.
As between a footman in the act of attempting to cross a street (or a portion of it, as in this case to reach a street car in the center thereof) and the driver of a team of horses upon the street, there is no rule or custom that may be said to have ripened into law that requires or even indicates that the teamster with his team should pursue his course eastwardly along
The order setting aside the verdict and judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions that final judgment be entered for defendant upon the verdict as returned by the jury.