Railway Companies v. Foster

88 Tenn. 671
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 88 Tenn. 671 (Railway Companies v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railway Companies v. Foster, 88 Tenn. 671 (Tenn. 1890).

Opinions

Caldwell, J.

On August 2, 1888, David Foster, ,a colored man about seventy years of age, wliile walking upon the railroad track about one mile south of Newborn, Tennessee, was overtaken by a freight - train, struck by the locomotive and so ■severely injured that he died within an hour.

Eliza Foster, his widow,' having first taken out letters of administration .on his estate, brought this [673]*673action against the plaintiffs in error, claiming $10,-000 damages. She obtained a judgment for $300, and the defendants below have appealed in error.

Appellants assign error (1) on the original charge of the trial Judge; (2) on his action in refusing to instruct the jury as requested; (3) on what is termed the second charge.

First. — The first assignment cannot be maintained, because the original charge of the Court upon which it is based, and which is complained of as erroneous, is not made a part of the record by bill of exceptions. It is true that what purports to be a charge in the case is found in the transcript, but it precedes the bill of exceptions, and is in no way made a part of it. Therefore, under a familiar and well-established rule of practice, it cannot be considered for any purpose in this Court. Huddleston v. State, 7 Bax., 55; Bass v. State, 6 Bax., 583; McGhee v. Grady, 12 Lea, 96; Owens v. State, 16 Lea, 1.

Second. — The next assignment fails for equally conclusive but different reasons. To put the trial Judge in error for refusing to give special instructions to the jury, it must appear that they were requested after and not before he submitted his general charge; the object of such instructions being not to suggest in the first instance what the charge shall be, but rather to supply some omission or correct some mistake made in the general charge — to present some material question not treated at all, or to limit or extend, eliminate or [674]*674more accurately define, some proposition already submitted to the jury.

TJnder the practice of this Court as laid down in Roller v. Bachman, 5 Lea, 158, 159, the several propositions which it is insisted were erroneously refused in this case, cannot be considered for purposes of reversal, because they were submitted to the trial Judge “at the conclusion of the evidence,” and no request for additional instruction was made after he had delivered his charge.

Of coui'se we know it is usual for counsel, by oral argument or written statement, sometimes both, to present their views of the law of the case in advance of the charge. That is a proper practice, and instead of being condemned is to be encouraged; yet, such presentation is not ' to be treated as a request for additional instructions, and made ground for reversal if not adopted by the trial Judge. • The office of special or additional instructions is that already indicated.

It may be said that counsel who have submitted one view of the law, should not be put to the useless and embarrassing task of repeating it, in the form of an additional instruction, after the Court has given a contrary proposition in charge. That is true. But in that ease nothing is lost if the request is not made; because, if the charge as given is ei’roneous, a reversal will follow without the request, and if correct the request could not change the result.

Again, the record, after setting out the prop[675]*675osition submitted for charge, recites that the request was' “refused and the Court did instruct the jury as follows:” As a matter of fact, nothing folíenos, and the bill of exceptions remains in that incomplete condition, failing to show what instructions were given instead of those requested. So far as we are informed, they may have contained a full aud accurate statement of the law applicable to every question arising in the case. Whether this be true in reality cannot be ascertained, but it must be presumed to be so in the absence of those instructions themselves. Lane v. Keith, 2 Bax., 189; Insurance Company v. Sturges, 12 Heis., 339.

Third,. — The other assignment is made on the following recital in the bill of exceptions: “ The jury having considered the case, returned and asked the Court whether, if they found that the defendant had not strictly complied with all the statutory rules or precautions as given in charge, yet that the deceased’s own want of care and gross neglect-was the direct cause of his injury and death, they could not yet find for the defendant. To which the Court replied that they could not, but should consider such contributory neglect on the part of the deceased in mitigation of damages. If they found the railroad company wanting in full performance of statutory duties, plaintiff would be entitled to some damages in any event.”

It is insisted that this action of the Court was erroneous, and that he should have answered the [676]*676question of the jury in the affirmative. Taking the case as stated in the question, the' contention is that, inasmuch as the gross neglect of the deceased was the direct cause of his injury and death, his negligence should operate, not merely in mitigation of damages, but as a bar to the action, notwithstanding the failure of the railroad employes to observe the precautions prescribed in § 1166 of the Code.

Learned counsel ■ makes an able and forcible argument in support of this view; yet we think it contrary to the obvious meaning of the statute. The response ‘of the trial Judge is in conformity to the construction announced by this Court in numerous decisions, some of which we cite. N. & C. R. R. Co. v. Smith, 6 Heis., 174; Hill v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 9 Heis., 823; Railroad v. Walker, 11 Heis., 383; N. & C. R. R. Co. v. Nowlin, 1 Lea, 523; Railroad Co. v. Smith, 9 Lea, 470.

Section 1166 of the Code (T. & S.) prescribes certain precautions to be observed by railroads for the prevention of accidents. The next two sections declare, in the plainest terms, the legal consequences of observance and non-observance. By § 1197 it is declared that in every case of nonobservance the railroad shall be liable for the damage done; and by §1198 it is declared that in every case of observance it shall not be liable at all. By the positive language of the statute liability flows from non-observance, and non-liability follows observance. Neither liability nor non-lia[677]*677bility is made to depend on the cautions or incautious conduct of the person ^injured; both are to be determined by the conduct of the r*ailroad’s employes. The injured person may be ever so negligent in the one case- and yet recover something, while in the other case he may be entirely without negligence and yet recover nothing.

At the common law contributory negligence may bar the action, but under the statute it is to be considered only in mitigation of damages. This distinction is forcibly illustrated and pointedly enforced in the ninth Lea case just cited. There the plaintiff’s intestate walked some distance on the track in the direction of the coming train and in full view of it, though several times warned of her danger by others near by.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Tenn. 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railway-companies-v-foster-tenn-1890.