Cornelius v. Hultman

62 N.W. 891, 44 Neb. 441, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 71
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1895
DocketNo. 6055
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 N.W. 891 (Cornelius v. Hultman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornelius v. Hultman, 62 N.W. 891, 44 Neb. 441, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 71 (Neb. 1895).

Opinion

Post, J.

This was an action in the district court for Buffalo county by Caroline Huffman, widow of Gust Huffman, deceased, in her own behalf and in behalf of her minor children, against the plaintiffs in error on the bond of Tony Cornelius, a licensed saloon-keeper, for damages on account of the death of said Huffman, while under the influence of intoxicating liquors sold and furnished him by said Cornelius. A trial before the district court resulted in a verdict [443]*443and judgment for the plaintiffs therein, which it is sought to reverse by means of a petition in error addressed to this court.

The first proposition asserted in the brief of plaintiffs in error is that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence and should have been arrested on that ground. That contention necessitates a brief recital of the facts so far as disclosed by the record. On the night in question the deceased, who had for six years,last preceding been in the employ of the Union Pacific Railroad Company as section foreman at Buda, a station on its main line, left home in company with one Carlson, going to Kearney, about four miles distant, on a hand-car for the purpose of procuring provisions for his family. About 11 o’clock of the same night he started for his home on the hand-car but was run do\tm and killed by a passenger train before reaching his destination. Carlson, who accompanied the deceased, testified that they visited the saloon mentioned in the pleadings about fifteen minutes before 6 o’clock, where each took a drink of whiskey. They then left the saloon for the purpose of making their purchases, in which they were engaged from twenty to thirty minutes, when they returned to the saloon and took a second drink of whiskey. They remained there, in the language of the witness, “talking and fooling around” until a few minutes before 9 o’clock, when, being admonished by.the clerk in the grocery store that he was about to close for the night and to go and get the goods purchased by them, the deceased requested the witness to get the gi’oceries and take them to the hand-car, which the latter did, remaining at or near the car until the arrival of the deceased, nearly two hours later. After their return to the saloon from the grocery store the deceased, in addition to the two drinks of whiskey, drank three or four glasses of beer. Mr. Birch, an employe in the freight office at Kearney, testified that he met the deceased about 11 o’clock, at which time the latter was drunk and staggered constantly [444]*444while assisting Carlson to put the hand-car on the track, and that he, witness, warned him not to start ahead of the passenger train which was due in about ten minutes. An inquest was held under the direction of the coroner the following day, at which Cornelius, the proprietor, testified that the deceased drank beer in his saloon the night of his death, and purchased a bottle of liquor which he carried away. Dr. Humphreys, the coroner who examined the person of the deceased, found thereoji a broken bottle which had recently contained whiskey. John Campbell, proprietor of a saloon on the same street and directly opposite that of the plaintiff in error Cornelius, testified that deceased visited his saloon the night of his death and appeared to the witness to be then intoxicated. On the other hand, Mr. Downing, the barkeeper, testified that the deceased drank nothing in the saloon of plaintiff in error Cornelius that night and was apparently sober when he left. Messrs. Walker, Toole, and Barnes, who saw him in thesaloon about the time he left, testified that he appeared to be sober, while Mr. Hawkins testified that he drank two or three and maybe four glasses of beer with the deceased in the saloon of plaintiff in error Cornelius that night, and assisted him to put the hand-car on the track, but that he, deceased, “wasn’t excited by drink or anything of that kind.”

The question at issue was whether Cornelius in person or by his servants furnished to the deceased intoxicating liquor on the night in question which caused or contributed to the result stated. (McClay v. Worrall, 18 Neb., 44; Jones v. Bates, 26 Neb., 693; Elshire v. Schuyler, 15 Neb., 561.) That the evidence adduced by the plaintiffs below tends to establish the affirmative of that issue cannot be doubted. It is not the province of this court to critically weigh the evidence. That is a function of the jury under the instruction and guidance of the trial judge; and a ver-, diet or finding will not be disturbed on account of a mere difference of opinion between this court and the jurors who [445]*445personally saw and'heard the witnesses, and are therefore better qualified to judge of their credibility. Such is the rule universally recognized in appellate proceedings, and is without doubt applicable to the facts of this case.

Another objection argued under this assignment is that the evidence is not responsive to the allegations of the petition, which, after charging the sale of liquor to Hultman, in consequence of which the latter became intoxicated, concludes as follows: The said Gust Hultman * * * while on his way home was overtaken by one of the trains of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and because 'of his drunken and intoxicated condition he was unable to alight from said liand-car and was struck by said railroad train,” etc. In addition to the evidence above summarized, Carlson, who was with the deceased on the hand-car, testified that he jumped the instant he saw the head-light of the engine, and had barely touched the ground when the collision occurred. There is no evidence that the deceased saw the approaching train or was aware of its presence until Carlson cried, “Jump, the train is on us!” The witness was further interrogated as follows:

Q. Did he jump?
A. No.
Q,. What happened?
A. I do not know, because as I touched the ground the engine struck the hand-car.”

The point made on this record is that the fatal injury was occasioned, not by the inability of the deceased to alight from the hand-car, but on account of his failure to observe the train; or, to state the proposition in the language of counsel for plaintiffs in error, “The real question is, was Hultman incapacitated by liquor to such an extent that by reason thereof he was unable to escape the danger that was ■ upon him, or is it a fact that he was not apprised of the danger until too late to escape?” We are unable to perceive the force of this reasoning. That the deceased was [446]*446unable to safely alight from the hand-car after he observed the passenger train is conceded by the plaintiffs in error, and satisfactorily established by the evidence of Carlson; and whether his incapacity was a physical one, or was due to mental obtuseness which rendered him insensible to the peril confronting him until too late to make his escape, cannot be regarded as material, provided the primary or responsible cause thereof was the intoxication alleged.

The next assignment is the giving of instruction No. 8'* by the court on its own motion as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.W. 891, 44 Neb. 441, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornelius-v-hultman-neb-1895.