Omaha Street Railway Co. v. Clair

58 N.W. 98, 39 Neb. 454, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 37
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1894
DocketNo. 5451
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 98 (Omaha Street Railway Co. v. Clair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Omaha Street Railway Co. v. Clair, 58 N.W. 98, 39 Neb. 454, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 37 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

This action was brought against the Omaha Street Railway Company, and successfully maintained, for the recovery of damages on account of personal injuries sustained by the defendant in error. The allegations of his petition, upon [456]*456which the liability of the railway company was predicated in the district court of Douglas county, wherein the judgment was obtained, were made in the following language : “On or about the 24th day of December, 1889, the plaintiff wás passing along Fourteenth street in the city of Omaha, at the intersection of Dodge street and Fourteenth street, between the hours of 7 and 8 o’clock in the evening, using due care and caution in passing; that no cars of the said defendant were passing along said street at said time, and without any warning from the servants and agents of said defendant the agents and servants in charge of one of its cars carelessly and negligently drove on.e of its cars upon and against the plaintiff; that when said car struck the plaintiff he was thrown violently to the ground thereby, and was by the concussion deprived of his senses, and while the plaintiff was endeavoring to escape from off the railway tracks of the defendant, another car of the defendant, being operated by the agents of said company, approached from the east, and the persons in charge of said car saw, or could easily have seen, plaintiff on'said track, and while plaintiff was endeavoring to raise himself from said track and remove himself therefrom, and while insensible as aforesaid, the defendant by its agents negligently and carelessly ran' its car.upon and against the plaintiff and caught the plaintiff in the gearing of said car and carried him for about seventy feet underneath said car; that when the second car struck plaintiff, the iron bolts and gearing of said car were forced into and through the leg of plaintiff at and near his knee, and plaintiff was wounded and bruised and injured to such an extent that he was confined to his bed for six months following, and was'caused to expend large sums of money for physicians, and nurse and care, and was caused to expend large sums of money for attention to him during his said confinement because of said wounds and bruises so received. Plaintiff has been by reason of the facts aforesaid deprived of following his usual calling ever since then, [457]*457and has suffered great bodily pain and mental anguish; that the wounds so received by plaintiff through the negligence and carelessness of the defendant have rendered him a cripple for life, and he has been damaged in the sum of $25,000.” For this sum named he prayed judgment. The. railway company by its answer admitted that it was a corporation operating a street railway, and' that the plaintiff was injured at about the time and place alleged, but denied every other allegation of the petition. In the answer it was further alleged that the injuries complained of were attributable solely to the carelessness and negligence of plaintiff, and that if plaintiff at the time of said injury had been exercising due and reasonable care he would not have been injured. By the reply there was a denial of negligence and want of care on the part of plaintiff.

Consistently with the averments of the petition, three witnesses, one of whom was the plaintiff, testified that the forward car in the cable train going eastward on Dodge street had no head-light or other light making the train visible at the time of the injury complained of, and with different degrees of positiveness these three witnesses testified that no audible warning was given of the approach of the said east-bound train. The testimony of plaintiff and one of these witnesses was that plaintiff attempted to cross Dodge street from the south at its intersection with Fourteenth street; that he was not warned of the approach of the east-bound cable train, and could neither see nor hear it, and that when crossing the most southerly of the two parallel tracks running lengthwise of Dodge street, he was struck by the east-bound train approaching on said track; that he was thereby stunned and rendered incapable of exercising due caution and avoiding contact with another cable, train approaching from the east on the most northerly of the two parallel tracks referred to, though plaintiff admitted in his evidence that he had, just before being struck, noticed the near approach of the west-bound train, [458]*458carrying a head-light and thereby rendered visible. Plaintiff and one of his witnesses further gave evidence that after plaintiff was struck by the east-bound train, and in the dazed condition resulting from said collision, he attempted to cross the northernmost of the two parallel tracks on Dodge street. The evidence of the plaintiff and the two witnesses above referred to was that he was struck by the westward-bound train and borne down beneath the advance ear thereof and thus sustained very serious injuries. The evidence on behalf of the defendant, given by eight witnesses, was that the eastward-bound train met that bound westward on Dodge street at some point between Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets, and that there was a headlight on the eastward-bound train, and that the ordinary signal for a crossing was given by means of a bell before the east-bound train reached Fourteenth street, and as soon as it became apparent, when the front of the train had nearly reached a point opposite where the plaintiff was standing, just south of the car track, that plaintiff was about to cross in front of the moving train last mentioned, a danger signal was at once given and that the train was stopped before it traversed a distance of fifteen feet, but too late to avoid a collision with plaintiff, who had meantime stepped upon the track in front of the eastward-moving train ; that the effect of this collision was to throw the plaintiff under the forward car in the eastward-bound train where he sustained the injuries complained of. It is useless to attempt to harmonize the testimony, for, as will be very readily seen, it is contradictory at all points, even as to the identity of the train with which plaintiff collided. The jury evidently believed tbe version given by plaintiff’s witnesses, though said witnesses were numerically in the minority. As this verdict was not without support of competent testimony, and as the trial judge, who had opportunity for observation of the witnesses which is denied us, refused to interfere with it, thereby adding his [459]*459sanction to the jury’s estimate of the weight of the evidence upon which it was founded, we cannot interfere solely on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence in support of the verdict.

It is insisted, however, by plaintiff in error, that instructions numbered 1, 9, and 10, given at the request of the defendant in error, stated the law incorrectly as applicable to the facts in controversy. The same objections are made to each of these instructions. It will therefore be. necessary only to quote the first referred to, especially in view of the fact that it was selected as a sample instruction against which objections are specifically urged. This instruction is in the following language:

“1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 98, 39 Neb. 454, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omaha-street-railway-co-v-clair-neb-1894.