Loeffler v. City of West Tampa

55 Fla. 276
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Fla. 276 (Loeffler v. City of West Tampa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loeffler v. City of West Tampa, 55 Fla. 276 (Fla. 1908).

Opinion

Parichill, J.,

(after stating the facts.)—There are four assignments of error. The third and fourth are not argued and will be treated as abandoned.

The first assignment is, “That 'the court erred in requiring the plaintiff by its order to join in the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.” The second assignment is, “That the court erred in the entry of its order sustaining the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence of the plaintiff”

It is contended by plaintiff in error that the statements of fact admitted by the demurrer to be true are contradictory, in that the statement, “that plaintiff could not' stop his horse without going into the ditch and immediately plaintiff jerked the horse round to the right, and the horse jumped, the left wheel of the buggy going into the ditch, and the plaintiff was then in a situation to have gone down 'Cherry street without injury,” is inconsistent with the statement “but believed he could safely make a second turn and proceed down Howard avenue to the right of the ditch, which he attempted to do, and that it was the best course for him to 'have taken, and that he did all in his power to avoid injury, and in so doing the buggy wheel struck against an electric light [281]*281■pole at the side of Howard avenue, thereby throwing plaintiff from his buggy, by reason of which he sustained injuries as alleged in his declaration.” And counsel, quoting from! Morrison v. McKinnon, 12 Fla. 552, text 557, and Mugge v. Jackson, 50 Fla. 235, 39 South. Rep. 157, text 160, says: “A demurrer to evidence ought not to be allowed where the party demurring refuses to admit the facts which the other party attempts to prove, nor when he offers contradictory evidence or attempts to establish inconsistent propositions.” Counsel for defendant in error contend that this assignment of error cannot be considered, because it is based upon matters in paisJ not presented by the bill of exceptions as required by the rules of this court.

The demurrer to the evidence, the order or ruling of’ the court requiring the defendant to join in the demurrer, followed by the written joinder in demurrer required by such ruling, form part of the record proper in the case, and no exception to the ruling on the demurrer is necessary to have it reviewed here. Barnes v. Scott, 29 Fla. 285, 11 South. Rep. 48. A demurrer to the evidence introduces the facts into the record, and its effect is to make the evidence stated therein a part of the record. 2 Cyc. 1064; Suydam v. Williamson, 20 How. (U. S.) 427, 15 L. Ed. 978.

The grounds of the objection made by plaintiff to a joinder in the demurrer to the evidence, as that the demurrer does not correctly state the evidence, are matters in pais, not part of the record proper, and may be evidenced to this court only by bill of exceptions, for this court could not tell whether the trial court ruled correctly on such an objection unless the evidence be preserved and evidenced to us as by bill of exceptions; We have held that where the supposed statement of facts under the demurrer of what the evidence proved is not properly [282]*282made, as that the demurrer does not admit the facts Which the other party attempts to prove, or where there is an evident attempt to set up' the evidence of the defendant against the evidence of the plaintiff and to bring before the court a loose and indeterminate statement of disputed facts, the plaintiff in error has the .right to insist, as error apparent on the statement itself, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer. Can these criticisms be fairly visited upon the d'emurrer in the instant case? Tlie demurrer contains the statement that the defendant “admits that the evidence of the plaintiff establishes the following facts.” There is no attempt to set up the evidence of the defendant against the evidence of the plaintiff. The determined facts are stated in positive terms. It is not a loose statement of the testimony of the witnesses. Counsel argues that there is an attempt to establish inconsistent propositions.

Construing the demurrer most strongly against the defendant, we think the statement shows, and the defendant admits, that the plaintiff was then,'—at the time he jerked the horse round to the right,—in a position to have gone down Cherry street without injury, but plaintiff believed he could safely make a second turn and proceed down Howard avenue to the right of the ditch, and that it was the best course for him to have taken, and he attempted to do so, and he did all in his power to avoid injury, and in so doing—that is, .in attempting to make a second turn and proceed down Howard avenue,—the buggy wheel struck against an electric light pole. Though reason of which he sustained the injuries complained of.

The only objection made to the form of the demurrer to the evidence is, that the statement that the plaintiff was then in a situation to have gone down Cherry street without injury is contradictory of and inconsistent with the further statements that the course plaintiff pursued [283]*283was t'he best course for him to have taken, and that he did all in his. power to avoid injury, and in so-doing the buggy wheel struck against an electric pole. Though this contention may be conceded, counsel for 'defendant in error do not attempt to establish this inconsistent proposition. They do not contend that the demurrer should have -been sustained because it shows that plaintiff was in a position to have gone down Cherry street without injury, and because he did not do so, but adopted another course, he cannot recover. No- such contention is made; but, on the contrary, the defendant contends that the facts proved are substantially variant from those alleged in the declaration. The statement, then, that plaintiff was in a position to have gone down Cherry street without injury -may be eliminated, and the question is, even though the facts proved established a good cause of action, was that the cause of • action declared upon ? If, then, there is a fatal variance between the cause of action alleged and the one proved, even though there be a contradictory statement of facts in the demurrer, if, upon any theory of proof, the plaintiff cannot recover, we do not think it would be reversible error for the court to sustain the demurrer to the evidence. Let us consider, then, the question of variance-.

The cause of action sued upon is, that plaintiff was “unavoidably thrown from the said vehicle upon the approach of the -said horse and vehicle to said ditch, of t'he existence of which said ditch’s dangerous and unsafe condition plaintiff had no knowledge or warning, by means of the shying and effort of the said horse to avoid precipitation into said ditch, whereby the plaintiff’s right foot was caught between the spokes of the wheels of the said vehicle and the plaintiff was thrown against an electric light pole by the side of said street.”

The case made by the proof is that plaintiff could not [284]*284stop 'his horse without going into the ditch, and immediately plaintiff jerked, the horse around to the right, and the horse jumped, the left wheel of the buggy g'oing into the ditch, and plaintiff was in a situation to have gone down Cherry street without injury, but believed he could safely make a second turn, which he proceeded to1 do * * * and in so doing the buggy wheel struck

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Bluebook (online)
55 Fla. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loeffler-v-city-of-west-tampa-fla-1908.