Graham v. Ogden Union Ry. & Depot Co.

6 P.2d 465, 79 Utah 1, 1931 Utah LEXIS 72
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1931
DocketNo. 5144.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 465 (Graham v. Ogden Union Ry. & Depot Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Ogden Union Ry. & Depot Co., 6 P.2d 465, 79 Utah 1, 1931 Utah LEXIS 72 (Utah 1931).

Opinions

FOLLAND, J.

By this action plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries claimed to have been suffered August 29, *3 1923, when a wagon in which she was riding tipped over, the horse drawing the same becoming frightened through the alleged fault of the defendant in the operation of its switch engine at a railroad crossing in Ogden, Utah. This is the third action brought to recover for the injuries alleged. The first was filed in the city court of Ogden, and on appeal to the district court was dismissed by plaintiff at the trial after both sides had rested. The second action was also filed in the city court, and appealed to the district court, where a trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff. An appeal from that judgment to this court brought about a reversal. Graham v. Ogden Union Railway & Depot Co., 71 Utah 365, 266 P. 504, 509. On a retrial in the district court a non-suit was granted and the cause dismissed. The present action was filed in the district court of Weber county December 21, 1929, wherein plaintiff prayed for general damages and also exemplary damages. Upon the trial, the court directed a verdict in favor of defendant, from which judgment plaintiff appeals.

At the time of the accident resulting in the alleged injuries, plaintiff was an occupant of a wagon driven by one Ross Gray. He and she testified that they waited in the wagon on Twenty-eighth street in Ogden City, where there were a number of railroad tracks across the street, at a point about 33 feet west of the west tracks, until a freight train cleared the switch just south of the crossing, and then started forward toward the crossing when a switch engine, which had been standing immediately north of the north line of Twenty-Eighth street, moved southward over the crossing emitting quantities of steam and hot water which frightened the horse and caused it to back and tip the wagon over. Other witnesses testified concerning the nature, extent, and use of the crossing. By another witness, Samuel A. Blair, a retired groceryman, farmer, and former railroad brakeman and conductor, plaintiff sought to show that it was unnecessary in the movement of the switch engine at the crossing to emit steam and hot water. The court sustained objections to this testimony on the ground, principally, *4 that the witness was not shown to be qualified as an expert to express an opinion on the subject. Plaintiff excepted to the rulings and, without calling any other witness on the subject of the emitting of steam in the movement of the switch engine, rested her case. She had also failed to prove that the action before the court was for the same cause of action as that previously brought and dismissed. Defendant thereupon rested without offering any testimony and moved for a directed verdict on certain specified grounds, among others, that plaintiff had failed to identify the present action with the former one in order to avoid the plea of the statute of limitations, and that she had failed to prove that escape of steam and hot water from the switch engine as it moved across the crossing was unnecessary in the proper operation of the engine. Immediately after the motion was made, and before final submission of that question to the court or the case to the jury, the plaintiff moved for permission to reopen her case for the purpose of supplying evidence on both the mentioned points. The motion was denied, the court stating: “The plaintiff having rested and the defendant also having rested, the motion comes too late.”

Counsel for plaintiff represented that his failure to supply proof of identity of the cause of action with the one formerly brought and dismissed was due entirely to over-

sight, and that the missing proof could and would be supplied without delay by offering the files of the former case, which were then in court in custody

of the clerk. It is not so clear that the other evidence with respect to the operation of the engine could be supplied so readily. It appears from statements of counsel that the engineer of defendant company was present in court, he having testified at a former hearing as to the construction of the engine and whether or not it was necessary in the operation of the engine at the time and place to emit steam. There is nothing in the record to indicate that evidence on the subject could not be supplied without unreasonable delay. The court, however, did not deny the motion on the ground that á reopening of the case would work unreason *5 able delay, nor that if the proposed evidence had been supplied and were before the court that, nevertheless, the motion for a directed verdict must be granted on other grounds stated. The only reason given for denial of plaintiff’s motion to reopen being that “the motion comes too late.” In this the court erred. It is well settled in this jurisdiction that in making motions for nonsuit and directed verdict the movant is required to “specifically state the grounds upon which the motion is based” for the purpose of apprising “the plaintiff of. the particulars wherein it is claimed his proof is deficient, so he may supply it if he is able to do so and prevent the expense and necessity of a retrial of the case.” Gesas v. O. S. L. R. R. Co., 38 Utah 156, 93 P. 274, 277, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1074. The Gesas Case stated the rule with respect to motion for nonsuit, but the same rule is applied to a motion for a directed verdict in the case of Smalley v. R. G. W. R. Co., 34 Utah 423, 98 P. 311, 316, wherein the court said “for much stronger reasons should such opportunity be given him on a motion for a direction of a verdict, which, if granted, would be a bar to another action.” See, also, Morris v. Salt Lake City, 35 Utah 474, 101 P. 373. The rule, thus announced, would be a futility if, when plaintiff’s attention is called, in the motion for directed verdict, to deficiencies in his proof, he is not permitted to reopen his case for the purpose of supplying such deficiencies if it is possible for him so-to do without unreasonable delay.

In view of the history of this litigation and the many times the case has been before the courts for trial, we can well appreciate the apparent impatience of the court in his refusal to reopen the case. In the light of the many trials of the action, counsel for plaintiff should have had his case so prepared that he could have presented all his evidence before resting. Notwithstanding this, however, where through oversight or surprise counsel does rest, and upon a motion for directed verdict his attention is called to deficiencies in his proof, and he timely moves the court for the privilege of reopening the case to supply evi *6 dence which he claims can, be promptly produced and offered, he should not be denied that opportunity. The refusal of the court to grant the motion to reopen the case under these circumstances is error so affecting the substantial rights of the plaintiff as to justify a reversal of the cause.

One other question requires attention, and that is the rulings of the court sustaining objections to the competency of the witness Blair to testify as an expert. This court, on the previous appeal of Graham v. Ogden Union Railway & Depot Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 465, 79 Utah 1, 1931 Utah LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-ogden-union-ry-depot-co-utah-1931.