Bartley v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co.

41 N.E.2d 805, 220 Ind. 354, 1942 Ind. LEXIS 234
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1942
DocketNo. 27,703.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 41 N.E.2d 805 (Bartley v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartley v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co., 41 N.E.2d 805, 220 Ind. 354, 1942 Ind. LEXIS 234 (Ind. 1942).

Opinion

Richman, J.

In the first trial of this case, after appellant (plaintiff below) had rested, the court-erroneously directed a verdict for appellee. Bartley v. *357 Chicago & E. I. R. Co. (1940), 216 Ind. 512, 24 N. E. (2d) 405. In the second trial, after both parties had presented all their evidence, appellees’ motion for a directed verdict in their favor was sustained and the jury returned such a verdict.

Appellant in the fifth specification of his motion for new trial attempts to predicate error on the court’s ruling sustaining appellees’ motion for verdict and, in the sixth, “giving to the jury, at the close of all the evidence of the case, at the request of the defendants a peremptory instruction to return a verdict for the defendants.” Appellees, citing Getchel v. Chicago Junction R. Co. (1902), 29 Ind. App. 410, 411, 64 N. E. 618, and Cook & Bernheimer Co. v. Hagedorn (1925), 82 Ind. App. 444, 452, 131 N. E. 788, 791, correctly say that sustaining the motion was not reversible error since it worked no injury to appellant. The injury occurred when the verdict was directed.

Appellees assert also that there is no available error in the sixth assignment, quoted supra, because the instruction is not in the record and no exception thereto is shown. The bill of exceptions containing the evidence shows an exception to the ruling sustaining appellees’ motion, but none at all to the giving of the instruction. But appellant says that all of the proceedings are shown in an order book entry. Here again we find no exception to the giving of the instruction, though exceptions are shown to the ruling on the motion for a directed verdict and to the ruling on appellees’ motion for judgment on the verdict after it was received. The fact that an exception to either a written or an oral instruction is contained in an order book entry does not necessarily bring it into the record.

*358 *357 At the time this case was tried our 1940 Rules were *358 not in force. Exceptions were required to make any error available. There was no pretense of compliance with § 2-2010, Burns’ 1933 (Supp.), § 343, Baldwin’s Supp. 1935. Certain “matters” are in the record without a bill of exceptions under § 2-3104, Burns’ 1933, § 462, Baldwin’s 1934, but not instructions nor exceptions thereto. This has long been the rule in Indiana. In Hall v. Durham (1887), 109 Ind. 434, 436, 9 N. E. 926, 10 N. E. 581, it was said:

“The clerk, after noting on the order-book the empanelling of the jury, proceeded as follows: ‘And the jury, having heard the evidence and argument of counsel, are, by the order and direction of the court, required to return the following verdict:’ then setting out the verdict in full, which, as has been stated, was in favor of the plaintiff. But there is no mention of these proceedings in the bill of exceptions. If the jury were required to return a particular verdict, it was necessarily through the medium of an instruction given them by the court, and a question could only be reserved upon such an instruction by bringing it into the record in some lawful manner. The entry of the clerk, set out as above, did not take the place of a bill of exceptions, and consequently presents no question for our consideration.”

The rule has been applied in Raper v. American Tin-Plate Co. (1901), 156 Ind. 323, 59 N. E. 937; Williams v. Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. (1918), 68 Ind. App. 93, 120 N. E. 46; O’Dell v. Miller (1934), 99 Ind. App. 480, 192 N. E. 121. See also Getchel v. Chicago Junction R. Co., supra; Goodman v. State (1919), 188 Ind. 70, 121 N. E. 826; 2 Watson’s Works’ Practice and Forms, § 1696, p. 302.

*359 *358 Davis v. Mercer Lumber Co. (1905), 164 Ind. 413, 416, 73 N. E. 899, seems to hold that an oral direction *359 to return a certain verdict “is not in the sense or nature of an instruction advising the jury in respect to matters of law, . . .” If this be true nevertheless it is of such a nature that it must be brought into the record by bill of exceptions which must show not only the directon of the verdict but that an exception thereto was taken. The exception was shown in the Davis case, supra, but not in the case at bar. The error, if any, is not available to appellant.

In specifications 7, 8 and 9 of the motion for new trial error is assigned with respect to proof of a penal ordinance enacted in 1894 limiting freight trains to a speed of eight miles per hour within the corporate limits of Evansville. The seventh specification alleges error in refusing to permit the reading in evidence of Section 1 of the ordinance from a book which appellant’s attorney stated in his offer was “compiled by John W. Brady and John R. Brill, said book purporting to be published by the authority of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana, under date of December 1, 1915.” The record does not disclose the fact that it purported to be so published. Counsel’s oral statement to that effect may not have been substantiated by examination of the book itself. For this reason, regardless of others, the offer was properly refused.

The eighth specification alleges error in not permitting appellant to read in evidence all of the same ordinance from the minute book of the Common Council of the City of Evansville. The objection was properly sustained for there was no showing that the ordinance had ever been published as required in the case of penal ordinances.

The tenth specification relies upon the statutory seventh cause for new trial, § 2-2401, Burns’ 1933, § 368, *360 Baldwin’s 1934, “Newly-discovered evidence, material for the party applying, which he could not, with reasonable diligence, have discovered and produced at the trial.” The evidence in question, as disclosed by the affidavits filed with the motion, was a book entitled “Charter and Ordinances of the City of Evansville” published in 1901. Assuming without deciding that this book would have sufficiently proved the existence of the ordinance, we cannot say that the court erred in denying the motion for new trial on account of its discovery.

It is well settled that applications for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence are looked upon with disfavor. Not only must diligence preceding the trial be shown but the evidence must be of such a character as to raise a reasonable presumption that a different result will be reached if it is introduced in the new trial. Granting such a motion is within the sound discretion of the trial court whose ruling will not be disturbed except for abuse of such discretion. Donahue v. State (1905), 165 Ind.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E.2d 805, 220 Ind. 354, 1942 Ind. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartley-v-chicago-eastern-illinois-railway-co-ind-1942.