Larrabee v. Sewall

66 Me. 376, 1877 Me. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 31, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 Me. 376 (Larrabee v. Sewall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larrabee v. Sewall, 66 Me. 376, 1877 Me. LEXIS 155 (Me. 1877).

Opinion

Dickerson, J.

Exceptions are taken by the defendant to the refusal of the court to give certain requested instructions, the-want of fulness in giving others, and the rulings upon the admis[380]*380sion and exclusion, of testimony. "We shall consider only the exceptions relied upon in the argument, regarding the others as waived.

Great importance is attached in the argument to the alleged refusal of the court to give the fourteenth requested instruction which was as follows: “that even if the defendant was on the wrong side of the street, and the plaintiff saw his carriage in season to avoid the collision, and had an opportunity to do so before it took place, by the exercise of ordinary skill and care, and neglected to do so, she was guilty of negligence and cannot prevail in this case; and if she saw defendant’s carriage in season to turn her horse into the head of Grove street, or to stop him before the collision, it was her duty to do so.”

This request contains two propositions ; and if either of them is ex-roneous in law, the court properly refused to give the instruction requested. The second proposition is obviously ineoi’x’ect. Whether it was the plaintiff’s duty to turn his horse and carnage into Grove street, or to stop there depended upon the demand of ordinary care, under all the circumstances of the case ; that is a mixed question of law and fact for the jury under appropriate in-sti’uctions by the court. The court will not, except in very extreme cases, even where the facts are admitted or undisputed, determine the question of ordinary care as matter of law. It will never do so when men of equal intelligence and impartiality might honestly draw different inferences and deduce different conclusions from such facts. In such cases the law invokes the average judgment of twelve men as safer and wiser thau that of a single judge. In this very case persons of equal sense and prudence might have accepted different alternatives; one might have turned down Grove street, another might have crossed over to the westeim side of Washington street, while a third might have kept close to the sidewalk as the plaintiff did, and a fourth perhaps might have stopped the team opposite Albert Moses’ house. Where so much depended upon the degree of darkness, the effect of the light from the street lamps and private residences, the rate at which the parties were driving at the time, the plaintiff’s estimate of the distance between them, her position upon the lawful side of the street, [381]*381her expectations as to the duty and probable course of the defendant, arising from this fact, and her presence of mind under circumstances of suddenly impending personal peril, the law will not de-claro that ordinary care required her to choose any particular one of the alternatives presented, and hold her guilty of contributory negligence for not doing so. The second paragraph of this requested instruction in substance, called upon the court to withdraw the question of ordinary care from the jury, and to decide it as matter of law. For this reason, at least, the court properly refused to give the requested instruction. Webb v. P. & K. R. R. Co., 57 Maine, 117, 132. Mangam v. Brooklyn R. R., 38 N. Y. 455. Detroit v. W. R. R. Co. Van Steinberg, 17 Mich. 99. Railroad v. Stout, 17 Wall. 659. Railroad v. McElwell, 67 Pa. St. 315. 2 Redfield on Railways, 231.

The defendant also complains that the twelfth and thirteenth requested instructions were not given in terms, but with qualifications that impaired their force and effect. The substance of these requests is, that negligence is not necessarily to be imputed to the defendant for being upon the wrong side of the way at the time of the collision, and that if the darkness prevented him from distinguishing the right from the wrong side of the way, the jury might take that fact into consideration upon the question of negligence. The instruction upon this point was that if the defendant was at the left of the centre of the road at the time of the collision, the jury might consider it strong evidence of the defendant’s carelessness, but that that evidence might be controlled, and should be considered with the other evidence in the case in deciding the question of negligence.

The pi’incipal criticism upon this instruction is to the use of the words, “strong evidence of carelesness.” We think this language is unobjectionable. The fact that the defendant, at the instant of the collision, was driving in violation of the law of the road is, indeed, very “strong evidence of carelessness.” Unexplained and uncontrolled this fact would not only be “strong” but conclusive “evidence of carelessness.” The instruction, however, states the proposition in a form more favorable to the defendant by simply declaring in substance that it is “strong evidence” that a party is in the wrong when he is doing that which the law forbids him to do.

[382]*382The instruction upon the suitableness of the plaintiff’s horse, complained of by the defendant, was more favorable to him than the request. The omission to give the words, “and that unsuitableness contributed to the accident,” did not damage the defendant, but rather tended to his advantage. The court explicitly instructed the jury that it was the duty of the plaintiff to have a suitable horse, carriage and harness, without restricting this duty by the qualifying words of the request. The defendant cannot complain that the instruction imposed upon the plaintiff a more comprehensive and onerous duty than the request contemplated.

The objections to the admission and exclusion of evidence do not appear to be well founded. Some of the evidence admitted might perhaps have been excluded, as immaterial, but it could not have damaged the defendant; and the other evidence admitted was competent in some one of the various aspects of the case. We do not perceive that any evidence offered by the defendant was improperly excluded.

There remain to be considered the exceptions to the instructions and refusals to instruct in relation to the alleged discharge of the action of the plaintiffs, dated Aug. 21,1875. There was evidence to show that the wife, plaintiff, on August 23,1875, tendered back to Moses the $1500 received in discharge of the plaintiffs’ claim, for the purpose of rescinding the contract of settlement; and it was admitted that such tender was made to the defendant on the 25th day of the same month. The defendant sought to avoid the effect of the alleged tender to Moses, upon the ground that Moses had previously delivered the discharge to him, but as the evidence of such delivery did not fix the time definitely, the plaintiffs contended that the tender was. seasonably made to Moses. The instructions were full and explicit, and we think, unobjectionable, upon this aspect of the case. They were substantially, that if Moses was not acting as the agent of the defendant in effecting the settlement, the plaintiffs had a right to recall the discharge any time before its delivery to the defendant or some one authorized by him to receive it, but if he was the agent of the defendant in that transaction, delivery to him was delivery to the defendant.

The third requested instruction was properly refused. If it were [383]

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Bluebook (online)
66 Me. 376, 1877 Me. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larrabee-v-sewall-me-1877.