Craig Ex Rel. Craig v. Village of Meridian

52 P.2d 145, 56 Idaho 220, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 57
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
DocketNos. 6202 and 6203.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 52 P.2d 145 (Craig Ex Rel. Craig v. Village of Meridian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craig Ex Rel. Craig v. Village of Meridian, 52 P.2d 145, 56 Idaho 220, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 57 (Idaho 1935).

Opinion

GIVENS, C. J.

On May 29, 1930, about 8 P. M., Mrs. LaVerne Craig accompanied by her father and her three year old daughter, driving down Second Street in Meridian, Idaho, ran into an open ditch, approximately eighteen inches in *223 width and about two feet deep, excavated by appellant for the placing therein of water-pipes, and the daughter was thrown into the windshield, breaking the glass, receiving injuries to her left eye requiring its removal. Case No. 6202 was brought in the name of Virginia Lee Craig, the daughter, by Harold A. Craig, her father and guardian ad litem, for her injuries, and case No. 6203 was brought by Virginia’s mother and father to recover damages for medical expenses and for their loss of time, worry, grief, suffering, etc. "While the eases were separate and distinct, they were consolidated for purposes of trial and appeal, and will be so considered here.

Appellant assigns as error instructions given and rejected, and the overruling and denying of its motion for a new trial.

Respondents’ cases alleged appellant was negligent in not providing suitable and adequate notice, signs or watchman at or along the ditch in the street to warn persons driving on the intersecting and adjacent streets. Appellant on the other hand denied any negligence on its part and alleged a wooden lighted barrier and the dirt excavated from and piled along the ditch in the road gave sufficient notice and warning of the ditch, and that Mrs. Craig was contributorily negligent by reason of excessive rate of speed, defective brakes and failure to use due care to observe the alleged wooden barricade, light and dirt embankment.

Appellant urges as reversible error the following part of Instruction No. 7:

“The burden of proving that there were signs, barricades, or other means of giving notice or warning to persons of the unsafe condition of said street, and that such signs, barricades, or other means of notice or warning, were of such character and so placed as to be reasonably adequate for the purpose of giving notice or warning, is upon the defendant.’’

The rule is well established that the burden of proving negligence by a preponderance of the evidence remains upon the plaintiff throughout the trial (45 C. J. 1162, 1163), and the court properly instructed the jury to that effect in Instruction No. 15 as follows:

*224 “I have in these instructions in two or three instances told you that the burden of proving certain facts was upon the one or the other of the parties to this action.
“In addition to those instances, I instruct you also generally that the burden of proving that the defendant was guilty of negligence which was a proximate cause of the accident and resulting injuries to Virginia Lee Craig, is with the plaintiffs.....(Italics ours.)

It was incumbent on respondents in establishing defendant’s alleged actionable negligence to prove that there were no signs, barricades or other means of giving notice or warning, or if there were, that they were not sufficient to give the proper notice of the unsafe condition of said street. The instruction complained of by appellant is, however, directly in conflict with Instruction No. 15, in that the jury was told unequivocally that “the burden of proving that there were signs, barricades, or other means of giving notice .... were of such character and so placed as to be reasonably adequate for purpose of giving notice or warning is upon the defendant” (italics ours). Such direct conflict could not but leave the jury in a dilemma as to which rule to follow. The correct instruction merely added to the difficulty.

Respondent tacitly admits No. 7 was erroneous or at least does not attempt to justify or uphold it, except by the argument that since in the ease wherein the child was plaintiff by her guardian she could not be charged with the contributory negligence of her mother, if any, and that since the jury found for respondents in both cases, it must follow the mother was not guilty of contributory negligence in either- case. Granted, for the sake of argument only and not as a substantive proposition, such conclusion has no bearing on the burden of proof as to this allegation in the complaint:

“ .... defendant wilfully, carelessly, negligently and wrongfully failed to place thereon and warning sign reasonably calculated to warn persons driving by automobile in said street, and particularly on the right hand half of said Second Street through said intersection, of any ditch opening or obstruction, making it unsafe for travel thereon, and that *225 said defendant was careless, negligent and wrongful in failing to place on or near said ditch, any warning sign, signal or watchman or warn travelers of impending danger in traveling north and south on said Second Street through said intersection by automobile or otherwise; .... ”

pleaded by respondents as the negligence entitling them to recover. If there had been no issue of contributory negligence the burden would have been on respondents to prove appellant’s negligence and by pleading contributory negligence appellant did not admit its negligence. (Rogers v. Davis, 39 Ida. 209, 228 Pac. 330.) True, appellant alleged in its answer that adequate signs, etc., had been placed along the open ditch, but the burden of proof as to this issue was either on appellant or respondent, and could not be on both, but that is where the instruction placed it. In negligence actions the burden is on the plaintiff. (Holt v. Spokane & Palouse Ry. Co., 4 Ida. 443, 40 Pac. 56; Maloney v. Winston Bros. Co., 18 Ida. 740, 111 Pac. 1080, 47 L. R. A., N. S., 634.)

If the court meant to instruct as to the duty of 11 going forward” as Wigmore, vol. 5, page 449, section 2489, and others announce the rule, it did not so state. (Hunt v. Eure et al., 189 N. C. 482, 127 S. E. 593.) Nor can the instruction be considered as not prejudicial as in the nature of invited error under Kiesel v. Bybee, 14 Ida. 670, 95 Pac. 20, because there the defendants could have compelled by demurrer the amendment of’ the complaint thereby placing upon plaintiff the burden of proof, but they elected not to do so and by the denials in their answer assumed the burden of proof. Nor was there in that case any question of conflicting or contradictory instructions.

This precise point has been considered by the Washington court and the correct rule announced in Schmitz v. Mathews, 133 Wash. 335, 233 Pac. 660 (second case), wherein the court distinguishes Davidson Fruit Co. v. Produce Distributors Co., 74 Wash. 551, 134 Pac. 510 (second ease), and lays down the rule applicable in the case at bar, since the defendant herein did not request any instruction placing upon it the burden of proof, thus:

*226

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Bluebook (online)
52 P.2d 145, 56 Idaho 220, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-ex-rel-craig-v-village-of-meridian-idaho-1935.