Denver City Tramway Co. v. Norton

141 F. 599, 73 C.C.A. 1, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4037
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1905
DocketNos. 2,140, 2,141
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 141 F. 599 (Denver City Tramway Co. v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver City Tramway Co. v. Norton, 141 F. 599, 73 C.C.A. 1, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4037 (8th Cir. 1905).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

On the 30th day of July, 1902, the defendant in error Anna C. Norton, a citizen of the state of Nebraska, and the defendant in error Mary B. French, a citizen of the state of Texas, were visiting in the city of Denver, Colo. In connection with a number of other persons, they hired of the Denver Omnibus & Cab. Company, a tallyho coach, and rode out in the nighttime to a suburban hotel or resort, where they attended an entertainment. On returning to the city about 11:30 p. m., the said coach approaching on Logan avenue, at its intersection with Alameda street, was struck by a street car of the Denver City Tramway Company running on said Alameda street, whereby the coach was overturned and the said defendants in error received personal injuries. They brought separate actions, jointly against the two said companies, for damages. Over the objection of the plaintiff in error the two causes of action were consolidated by order of court for the purposes of trial. On trial to a jury, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant the Denver Omnibus & Cab Company, and separate verdicts against the Denver City Tramway Company, assessing the damages in favor of the defendant in error Anna C. Norton in the sum of $1,200, and in favor of the defendant in error Mary B. French in the sum of $2,500. To reverse these judgments the said tramway company prosecuted writs of error to this court, citing the defendants in error and said omnibus and cab company. There are a large number of assignments of error on this record, but we will discuss only such of them as we deem material.

Complaint is made of the action of the court in directing a consolidation of the two cases for trial. The two actions grew out of the same accident, with the same defenses, and depended on the same evidence. The only difference being in the matter of damages dependent upon the extent of the injury sustained by the respective plaintiffs. Such, a consolidation was clearly within the judicial discretion reposed in the court by section 921, Rev. St. U. S. [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 685]. The incidents of the trial disclose no foundation for the contention that the trial of the two cases to the same jury operated injuriously to either party.

Error is assigned to the alleged action of the court, in impaneling the jury, in not allowing the defendant tramway company more than three peremptory challenges. This assignment must fail, for the reason that the bill of exceptions does not show what in fact was the action of the court in this particular, or that any exception thereto was saved.

It is also assigned for error that the court did not dismiss the action in the case of the defendant in error Anna C. Norton, on the ground that the amount really in controversy did not exceed the sum of $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The amount of damages sued for was $10,000. Under the judiciary act the amount in dispute or matter in controversy which determines the jurisdiction of the [602]*602circuit court in suits for the recovery of money is the amount demanded by the plaintiff in the petition in good faith, and not the amount ultimately recovered. Peeler v. Lathrop 48 Fed. 780, 1 C. C. A. 93; Ung Lung Chung et al. v. Holmes (C. C.) 98 Fed. 323. We cannot say, on this record, that the amount demanded by the plaintiff below was not in good faith. This must be so, where, had the jury rendered a verdict on the evidence for a sum exceeding $2,000, it could not be said there was not some evidence to support the verdict, although in the judgment of the court the sum found by the jury might be excessive.

As the verdict of the jury was in favor of the Denver Omnibus & Cab Company, and the defendants in error did not sue out any writ of error thereon, the judgment in its favor is not here for review. Only in so far as any misdirection of the court in respect of the liability of the omnibus company for the injury in question may relate to and affect the responsibility of the tramway company, is it important to consider the contribution of the driver of the coach to the accident. The two companies being sued as joint tort-feasors, if the negligence of each contributed thereto, they are jointly and severally liable for the damages. And as, in the absence of any statute changing the rule, there could be neither any apportionment nor contribution among the wrongdoers of the damages, the tramway company is not entitled to a reversal of the judgment on account of any error committed by the court in favor of the omnibus company, although it might appear that such ruling tended unduly to prejudice' the defense of the tramway company.

It must be conceded, we think, that there was a failure in the court’s charge to direct the attention of the jury to some most inculpatory acts of negligent omissions of duty on the part of the driver of the tallyho coach. A careful reading of his testimony tends to show that he entertained the idea that the sounding of the bugle, by the bugler on the coach, on its approach in the block next to the intersection of Logan and Alameda streets, was a sufficient warning to any street car that might be approaching said crossing of the coming of the coach; and that the duty was thereby laid upon the motorman of the street car to heed the approach of the coach, and to see to it that no collision occurred, even if it necessitated the stopping of the car to give the coach the right of way, notwithstanding the fact, as his evidence" tends to show, he knew that his view for a considerable distance up Alameda street would be interrupted by a building near the corner of the two streets. When interrogated by counsel as to whether or not he stopped his coach, or got down himself or sent forward the bugler to reconnoiter to see if the way was safe, or whether he had any directions from the omnibus company in regard to crossing the car tracks, his answer was, “When you have a bugler they are supposed to blow the danger signal.” And further on he said that he supposed, the car would stop. The clear intendment is that he understood that in blowing the bugle he had performed his duty, so as to put the motorman on the defensive, and that he had a right to go heedlessly ahead onto the crossing, without more. The charge of the [603]*603court in this aspect of the case did not contradict clearly the notion of the driver. As if defining the sole duty of the coachman in this respect, the charge was:

If lie “approached the place of the accident in a careful manner, slackening the speed of the horses and blowing the customary notes of warning on the horn, and when the horses were on the track the driver acted in the most careful manner possible under the circumstances—and when I refer to circumstances here, I refer to the condition of the street, the distance from the street to the car track—you cannot hold the defendant the Denver Omnibus & Cab Company liable for injuries received by its passengers in the accident. In other words, if the driver of the coach was a person of competent skill, and in every respect qualified and suitably prepared for the business in which he was engaged (and I think the evidence in this case shows that he was), and the accident in which his coach was overturned was not occasioned by any fault or want of skill on his part, but by the negligence of the other defendant, then the defendant the Denver Omnibus & Cab Company would not be liable for injuries sustained by a passenger. The car company, however, would be liable, if you find from the evidence the injury resulted from the failure of the motorman in charge of the car to exercise ordinary or reasonable care in the management of the car.”

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Bluebook (online)
141 F. 599, 73 C.C.A. 1, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-city-tramway-co-v-norton-ca8-1905.