Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Parker

1915 OK 388, 151 P. 325, 50 Okla. 491, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1915
Docket5443
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1915 OK 388 (Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Parker, 1915 OK 388, 151 P. 325, 50 Okla. 491, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 454 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

MATHEWS, C.

1. This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by defendant in error on account of the negligence of plaintiff in error in the operation of its engine on its road at a public crossing in the town of Calvin, Hughes county. The plaintiff in error answered the petition of defendant in error by a general denial and the affirmative plea of contributory negligence. At the trial, the jury returned a verdict for defendant in error for $14,000, a remittitur of $4,000 was ordered by the court, and, the same having been done, the motion for a new trial was overruled, and the plaintiff in error brings the case here on appeal. The parties will be designated as in the trial court.

The defendant does not complain of the sufficiency of the petition, nor of any ■ ruling of the court upon the admission of testimony, but reserved exceptions to a large *493 number of the court’s instructions,. and also excepted to the court’s refusal to give a number of. instructions offered by the defendant, and also urges that the verdict was excessive.

2. Instruction No. 1 is as follows:

“The court instructs you, gentlemen of the jury, that the mere fact that the plaintiff has been injured on the street crossing in the town of Calvin by an approaching switch engine of the defendant company would not of itself entitle plaintiff to recover, nor show negligence on the part of the defendant company; but the plaintiff must go further and show by a fair preponderance of the evidence every material allegation of his petition, and that his injuries, if any were caused by the defendant’s negligence in the operation of the switch engine along the public thoroughfare, in failing to give proper signal, and in running at an unusual rate of speed, and as the direct, approximate result of the defendant’s negligence in the operation of said engine, plaintiff was hurt, and that said hurt was not the result of the plaintiff’s own carelessness and negligence in failing to use due caution and care on its own part to .stop, look, and listen for the approaching engine, and the burden is also upon the plaintiff to show by competent evidence where he has been injured and the extent thereof in order that the jury may intelligently assess his damages if they find plaintiff is entitled to prevail.
“By a ‘fair preponderance of the evidence’ the court does not mean necessarily the largest number of witnesses who may have testified in the case as to any given controverted fact, but that greater weight of the evidence, which, after a full and candid consideration of all the evidence, satisfies and convinces your judgment of the truth of the plaintiff’s contention.”

We think this instruction correctly states the law and cannot find that it assumes that plaintiff has been injured, as complains defendant, or that there, appears therein *494 any assumption that defendant was negligent in the operation of its switch engine; but the intent of this instruction was to inform the jury where the burden of proof lay and the extent thereof.

3. Instruction No. 2 is as follows:

“The court further instructs you that the plaintiff and the defendant both had a right to use the streets in the town of Calvin where the accident is alleged to have happened. It was likewise the duty of both to exercise reasonable care to avoid the collision, but it was not the duty of the defendant to exercise a higher degree of care than the plaintiff, nor was it the duty of the plaintiff to exercise a higher degree of care than the defendant. It was the duty of each, acting in his own place,- under the circumstances surrounding each — that is, plaintiff and the defendant’s employees in charge of the switch engine —to exercise that degree of care to avoid any accident which a reasonably prudent person would have exercised under the circumstánces. If defendant’s negligence is the. proximate cause of the injuries, then it is liable for damages. If the plaintiff’s negligence and the defendant’s negligence are equal, it cannot be said that the defendant’s negligence is the proximate cause, and therefore the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover. And in this case, if the plaintiff and the defendant’s employees in charge of the engine, with equal negligence, approached each other on the highway and an injury resulted to the plaintiff from the collision, then there can be no recovery for the reason it cannot be said that the negligence of either is the proximate cause of the injuries of the other.
“It is the plaintiff’s theory in this case, in support of which he has offered evidence, that he was going to the ^ Rock Island Railroad depot, and that before going upon the track of defendant’s railroad he stopped and looked and listened, and that because of the obstruction of a high bank on the east side of the street he could not see the approaching engine as it was backing west; that he never heard the whistle blow or-the bell ring; that in *495 the exercise of due care and caution he proceeded to cross the track and while doing so, because of the failure of the defendant’s agents and employees to give any signal of the approaching engine, and to exercise ordinary-care to avoid collision, his wagon was struck and he was knocked or thrown out of the same or forced to jump therefrom; and that at the time defendant’s engine struck the wagon in which he was riding and caused the injuries he complains of.
“If you find by a fair preponderance of the evidence that this contention is true, and that as a result of the failure of the engineer to ring the bell and sound the whistle before crossing the street, and to apply the emergency brakes after plaintiff was discovered by the engineer, or apprised of the fact of his presence by his brakeman or other employees, in time to stop the train, provided that in the exercise of ordinary care and caution the defendant could have stopped the train and prevented the accident, and but for which negligence on the part of the defendant’s employees the accident would not have happened, and you further find that the plaintiff’s injuries were not due to his own lack of care in seeking to avoid the collision with the train by first stopping, looking, and listening before going upon the track, then you should find for the plaintiff.”

Defendant complains that this instruction is too comprehensive, and insists that the court therein attempts to cover the law relative to the negligence of the defendant, contributory negligence, comparative negligence, and the doctrine of last clear chance, and also to state the theory of the case from the plaintiff’s side.

The practice of embracing several subjects in the same paragraph of the charge is not to be commended, and the best procédure is not to mix different propositions in the same paragraph' unless closely related; but this is a question of taste only, and error cannot be predicated thereon.

*496 But the prime complaint raised against this part of the instruction, which presents the most difficult, question in the case, is the contention that the court therein gives an instruction on the doctrine of comparative negligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 388, 151 P. 325, 50 Okla. 491, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-o-g-ry-co-v-parker-okla-1915.